Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Cropped Tutorial

Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Primer Tutorial

Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Cropped Tutorial

The video resulting out of yesterday’s Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Primer Tutorial, as shown below, could have done with some …

  • “visual cropping” … in other words, in our non-audio video recording, “crop” what the video is showing up the top regarding Sydney’s rainy weather that day … a job at first, looking online, got us confused with …
  • “video cropping” … which the excellent link points you to QuickTime Player’s Edit -> Trim… option … to alter the recording start and/or end (video) timings

… and lined us up with the excellent link that re-engaged us with a piece of functionality we’d already registered in passing, but needed somebody to push us into the “lateral thinking” required, thanks.

That “lateral thinking” idea still had us using QuickTime Player

  1. Get MacBook Pro
  2. Open desktop application QuickTime Player
  3. File -> Open Recent dual_recording.m4v … but don’t start playing it yet
  4. File -> New Screen Recording
  5. Position the “reb blob” recording window out of the way of dual_recording.m4v’s play window … ready (with your quick reflexes?)
  6. Be quick with all of …
    • Click Play “arrow” button in dual_recording.m4v’s play window
    • Click “red blob” … and overlayed on dual_recording.m4v’s play window will be
      “Click to record the full screen. Drag to record part of the screen.
      End recording by clicking the stop button in the menu bar.”
    • Take that advice (except we do a different closing method), and drag a window starting at the left at a height just above the setee and down to the bottom right of dual_recording.m4v’s play window
  7. When dual_recording.m4v’s play window plays to the end of the non-audio video, choose QuickTime Player (menu) -> Quit QuickTime Player
  8. Save to dual_recording_cropped.mov
  9. Reopen desktop application QuickTime Player
  10. File > Export to iPad,iPhone,iPod touch & Apple TV.. export from .mov to .m4v video format)
  11. Upload to YouTube via File -> Share to YouTube … resulting in this uploaded YouTube video

We hope you get some documentation and/or presentation ideas, cropping wise, from QuickTime Player (on Mac OS X today) in today’s tutorial.

Stop Press

A sneak peek for tomorrow shows us adding a (yet to be improved, first draft) audio track, and “video cropping” that audio/video presentation result to weed out the spurious parts of the video (and, as far as timing goes (and is guided by that first try at the audio track) agrees with the audio) at its end …


Previous relevant Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Primer Tutorial is shown below.

Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Primer Tutorial

Apple Dual Recording Dual Device Primer Tutorial

Recently, with YouTube iPhone Screen Recording via QuickTime Player Primer Tutorial as shown below, we discovered the incredibly useful inter-device Movie Recording “red blob” dropdown functionality of the QuickTime Player desktop application, that we use on a MacBook Pro using Mac OS X. That last time we used this functionality we were using it with an iPhone connected to the MacBook Pro via one of those very useful Apple white leads that are also used when recharging the iPhone. All that aspect to today’s idea of usage is the same, except that this time we are connecting to an Apple iPad tablet instead.

This time around, (dual) recording a procedure on the MacBook Pro that needs more than Screen Capture, but rather real life Movie Recording to get the gist, we are using …

  1. Get MacBook Pro
  2. Open desktop application QuickTime Player
  3. Get iPad
  4. Open the Camera app
  5. Connect the iPad to the MacBook Pro using an Apple white lead
  6. The desktop application iTunes may open on the MacBook Pro and you can Cancel any Sync or Download ideas presented, as you see fit
  7. On the MacBook Pro in the QuickTime Player desktop application, choose File -> New Movie Recording
  8. Pulldown the dropdown to the right of the “red blob” recording button, and select that iPad (which is called “Robert’s iPad) for either/both of Camera and Audio selections (and today we select “Robert’s iPad” just for Camera)
  9. At the iPad Camera app, pick the Video option
  10. Point the iPad (video) camera at the MacBook Pro screen and keyboard, perhaps involving facing the back of the iPad (where the camera is) to face the MacBook Pro
  11. Click the iPad (video) camera app’s version of the “round red blob” recording button
  12. Click the “red blob” recording button back at the MacBook Pro QuickTime Player desktop application
  13. On the MacBook Pro, perform the procedure you want to show and document, noting that keyboard involvement could be filmed and be relevant, as well as what shows on the MacBook Pro’s screen
  14. When finished with the procedure steps of interest, click the “black blob” stop recording button back at the MacBook Pro QuickTime Player desktop application
  15. Click the iPad (video) camera app’s version of the “square red blob” stop recording button
  16. In the iPad’s Photos app you will have the Movie Video Recording to use as you wish
  17. In the MacBook Pro you will have QuickTime Player’s version of the Movie Video Recording which can then have File > Export output it in a better variety of ways, including to the MacBook Pro’s iTunes application, and this or the Movie Recording on the iPad could be sent to YouTube, as required

This can also be done just with the iPad’s Camera app’s Video recording mode of use, for a simpler product, but the procedure above has greater Export possibilities (as you can see regarding the “much reduced in file size” (less than a sixth of the size)) presentation (of us plugging in the blog posting content of that previous blog posting into the TextWrangler editing session of us piecing together today’s blog posting, illustrating Mac OS X keyboard Select All (via Command A), Copy (via Command C) and Paste (via Command V)) today, which is an example of File > Export to iPad,iPhone,iPod touch & Apple TV.. export from .mov to .m4v video format) because of the interface established to the QuickTime Player MacBook Pro desktop application.

By the same token, you can not record on the iPad, by leaving out the itallicized steps above, for a simpler Movie Recording product that ends up just existing on the MacBook Pro’s QuickTime Player application, as we did with today’s presentation.

Think about placing the iPad on a stand, to make the Movie Recording better, as we did with today’s presentation, or, of course, get a second person to hold the iPad (video) camera, to record.

We hope you get some documentation and/or presentation ideas from today’s tutorial.

Stop Press

Tomorrow we “visually” crop (not the other “crop”) this video, and share on YouTube, a sneak peek being …


Previous relevant YouTube iPhone Screen Recording via QuickTime Player Primer Tutorial is shown below.

YouTube iPhone Screen Recording via QuickTime Player Primer Tutorial

YouTube iPhone Screen Recording via QuickTime Player Primer Tutorial

We’ve spoken before about the wonderful Mac OS X QuickTime Player application, and its use on a MacBook Pro, and its capabilities to upload videos to YouTube.

That’s all fine and good for Movie and Audio Recordings or Screen Capture Recordings related to the MacBook Pro, but did you know you can Screen Capture an iPhone (or iPad) by using a Mac USB white lead hooked up from the MacBook Pro to that other device, in our case an iPhone 6. So we record a session playing the Target Word Game you can read more about at PHP Target Word Game Mobile Friendly Tutorial.

We wanted to thank this great link, thanks, for the idea to use QuickTime Player for this job, never having used that arrow next to the red recording “blob” before. Makes me want to re-view The Blob in case I missed some useful subliminally embedded arrow.

We hope this is food for thought for you.

If this was interesting you may be interested in this too.


If this was interesting you may be interested in this too.


If this was interesting you may be interested in this too.

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