How to Record Screenshots and Video

Awhile back we told you  how to record penny auctions as you are bidding on them. It’s good to use a recording tool to record auctions, or even to just take screenshots, just in case a problem occurs or an auction review is needed.So we thought you might be interested in the program that we use quite frequently:  


Jing is a recording program by TechSmith that is free of charge, there’s also a professional version version for $14.95, but the free version will suffice as it allows users to:

  • Snap a photo of your screen
  • Record video of onscreen action
  • Share recorded images and video over the Internet

Download the free version of Jing and feel free to send us videos & screenshots if you need to!

That’s why online pharmacies is becoming more popular over the last years. Well-known are remedies which are used to reduce inflammation caused by inflammation of the skeletal muscle etc. There were only few examples. Did somebody tell you about canadian generic Viagra? Maybe you already know about the matter. Sexual malfunction can be a result of a physical condition. Even when it has a physical cause, psychological problems can make the disorder worse. Sex drive problems are so commonly a product of how you feel that there is something to that “headache” saying after all.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
About the author: Connect with me on Google+
3 comments… add one
  • Tyler November 4, 2010, 12:45 am

    Penny auction bidding often happens within the last second of the auction’s lifetime. Logical or not, people prefer to click the “bid” button at some point between when the timer reads “00:00:01” and “ENDED”. Assuming 1/8th second client-side interface lag, 1/4 second of network latency, 1/8th second of server-side processing delay, you’re already up to half a second behind the curve. It’s not ideal conditions, but it’s not unusual either.

    Add to that the fact that network latency cuts both directions (so your timer is already delayed) and the fact that syncing a browser-based timer to sub-second resolution is virtually impossible to reliably achieve anyway, and you see that the timer that’s ticking on your screen could be half a second slower than someone else’s. So by the time you click the “bid” button (at the very last moment possible), the auction has already ended. By the time your traffic finally gets to the server, it’s long since over — almost a second late. But from your perspective, it SHOULD have worked; when you clicked, it *appeared* that your bid was made before the timer ended.

    So auction owners are faced with two unpleasant possibilities: either reject bids that the user thinks were placed “in time”, or accept bids after the auction has technically ended.

    A good compromise is to not allow bids to be sent after the *browser* says that the auction has ended, but on the server side hold the auction open for an extra second or two to see if any “legitimate” bids trickle in after the buzzer.

    That means that for user whose auction clock is ahead of the others, it will appear that the auction has ended, and then come back to life again. That’s not actually what’s happening, it’s just an artifact of the fact that it’s impossible to keep all the browsers perfectly in sync.

    Some auction sites (such as BidCactus) solve the “come back to live” problem by changing the auction timer to read “going”, “going…”, “gone” instead of “00:00:02”, “00:00:01”, “ENDED”. Doing so allows them to extend that last second out until the server confirms that the auction is official over, even though it could take an extra second or more for that confirmation to arrive.

    Screen-recording an auction is only useful if you’re demonstrating an actual server problem or bug. Resurrecting auctions, it turns out, is neither.

    Reply
  • gayle November 5, 2010, 8:13 am

    I personally think that is part of the game… if we wait until the last second (obviously to see if anyone else will bid so you can save your bids) we run the risk of losing or we may win… you can never tell. Chalk it up to the game– I will say that screen recording may be helpful if there really is a glitch… which can and will happen from time to time. I have not had a problem re cooping bids when there has been a glitch on the auction sites end… but have never protested when it is on my end… If I have $100 worth of bids on something, I always worry that we lose power or lose internet signal… hasn’t happened yet.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.