Camtasia Studio 8: Reset Application Preferences

by Kevin Siegel Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn

I'm hard at work on my newest Camtasia Studio book (for version 8, which was recently released by TechSmith). As with all of my books, there will be hundreds of screen captures. In Camtasia, I played around with some of the program's available settings (such as Font, Font Size, Color, etc) but I didn't want to keep any of those changes. Upon returning later to create the screen captures, I was dismayed to see that the changes that I made while playing around were retained by the Camtasia software. This preference change wasn't just within the current project, but within all future projects. Prior to creating screen captures, I had to return all of the settings to the initial defaults. The problem was, I didn't know what those defaults were.

I began scouring Camtasia's dialog boxes looking for a Restore Defaults button or a Reset Preferences button. I looked everywhere to no avail. Figuring I was missing something obvious, I contacted my rep at TechSmith. I heard back pretty quickly and was surprised to learn that I hadn't missed anything… there is no master reset button anywhere within the application.

All was not lost however. Instead of having to uninstall and then re-insall Camtasia to reset the preferences (something I have been told that some Camtasia developers do), you can delete Camtasia's saved settings. The location of these settings isn't in an obvious location, but it's an easy process.

  1. Ensure that Camtasia Studio is not running
  2. If you're running Windows XP, choose Start > Run; if you're running Windows 7, choose Start
  3. Type regedit to open the Windows Registry Editor
  4. Browse to HKEY_CURRENT_USER
  5. Open Software
  6. Open TechSmith
  7. Open Camtasia Studio
  8. Delete the 8.0 folder
    Camtasia Studio 8 RegEdit, delete the 8.0 folder.
    The Camtasia Studio 8.0 folder selected.  
  9. Once you've deleted the 8.0 folder, close the Registry Editor

Upon restarting Camtasia, the 8.0 folder will automatically be recreated. You'll find that all of Camtasia's default settings have been restored. (Even the Welcome project you see when you first start Camtasia returns.)

Camtasia Studio: Why Do You Get Missing File Messages When Opening Projects?

This question came in last week:

Question: I'm using Camtasia Studio 7. I copied my project files to a new laptop. Every time I open a project created on my old system, I get an error message about missing files. I can locate the missing files, so everything ends up ok. But what's up with the messages?

Answer: When you add images and other assets to the Camtasia Clip Bin, the path used in Camtasia does not update should you change systems. Since the path name to those assets is different on each system you use if you import from, let's say, My Documents, Camtasia can't resolve the path. To avoid these kinds of error messages, I always work on my projects directly from my C drive (C:\). When I move the projects from system to system, I never get those messages (assuming I drop the project files at the root of the hard drive on each system).

eLearning & Grammar: Should eLearning Text Contain End of Sentence Punctuation?

by Jennie Ruby

We recently received the following from Midal, a Skills & Drills reader: "[In Captivate caption boxes,] is it necessary to include periods at the end of every sentence in a text caption even if it is as simple as "Click Submit"? I have been leaving out periods (but using commas and ellipsis), but our Editor mentioned that the text in caption boxes should always have periods at the end since the sentences are complete."

Should a short, one-sentence caption have a period at the end? Midal's editor says that the captions should have periods because they include complete sentences. Our editor/writer here at IconLogic says that it is a matter of taste. Is there a correct answer to this question?

The trouble is that this question lies outside of the rules of pure grammar. If you consult a grammar book, you will get the clear answer that a sentence should end with a period (or other closing punctuation mark). But the rules of grammar are meant for use in running text, like the text in a novel or a business letter. Once you enter the realm of displayed text, such as the text in Captivate text captions, or bulleted or numbered lists, or step-by-step instructions, you must consider both grammar and style. As our editor here at IconLogic implies, that makes the periods at the end of captions optional.

How then should we make the decision on whether to put the commas in or not? We can consult tradition, grammar, visual aesthetics and the intent of the communication. We already know that grammar tells us to put periods at the ends of sentences. Older, more traditional or formal, editorial styles call for treating displayed text the same way you would treat running text. The opinion runs along the lines of "That is a sentence, and regardless of whether it is in text or displayed as a caption, as a list item, or as an item in a list of instructions, it should still be punctuated as a sentence."

This tells us that if you are creating training in a more formal and traditional field, such as perhaps legal writing, or literature or another academic field, you should probably go with the traditional punctuation. Your readers will expect that.

But if you are not writing within one of those fields, then you may want to give more weight to considerations such as visual aesthetics. Generally a cleaner and more sparse design sense is valued in displayed text. For example, a bulleted list on a crowded web page looks cleaner and simpler without periods at the ends of the items, and a quick survey of websites reveals that lists on the Internet are typically done with no periods.

Modern print publishing styles also tend to omit periods, or any punctuation, from the ends of items in bulleted or numbered lists. The bullets themselves, plus the fact that each item is on a new line, tell the reader that each item is a complete thought or sentence.

In printed training books, our style here at IconLogic is to omit periods at the ends of individual commands in bulleted lists, simply to limit visual clutter. The idea is that less is more. In those list items, the fact that there is a bullet and the fact that the command is on a separate line from the other commands serve as enough signals to tell the reader that it is a unit of meaning. Adding the period would be redundant.

Having considered all of these situations, my opinion is that periods should be omitted from Captivate captions containing only one sentence. The fact that the text is in a visual bubble and the fact that there is typically just one command per bubble are two cues to the reader that the bubble contains one complete thought. Adding a period is a little redundant. Add to that the fact that the intent of the communication is to quickly and succinctly get across to the reader that he or she should click one thing, and I am solidly for omitting the periods.

That is my opinion, but when you add up the various factors of audience, topic, intention, and aesthetics, you may end up with the opposite opinion. What do you do in your writing? We would love to hear from you

***

Are you an eLearning developer who has been tasked with creating an effective voiceover script? If so, consider attending Jennie's Writing Effective eLearning Voiceover Scripts class. Jennie also teaches the Writing Training Documents and eLearning Scripts and the Complete Review of Grammar class.  

***

 

About the Author:  Jennie Ruby is a veteran IconLogic trainer and author with titles such as "Editing with Word 2003 and Acrobat 7" and "Editing with MS Word 2007" to her credit. She is a publishing professional with more than 20 years of experience in writing, editing and desktop publishing.

eLearning & mLearning: Easy Font Resources

by AJ George

Last week I covered how a selective use of fonts can enhance the effectiveness of your eLearning and mLearning content. This week I have a few easy resources for working with fonts.

Adding Distinct Personality with Handwriting

Adding a touch of handwriting to learning presentations can help to convey playfulness, whimsy, or even formality, depending on the script font chosen. The obvious choice would be to use the stock script fonts found on most computers. But why not make it more personal with your own handwriting?

One option, if you have a Tablet PC and the free downloadable software My Fonts (or a similar setup), is to create your own fonts. For a good tutorial on how to create a font, click here. If you don’t have a Tablet PC, you can always have someone else do the work for you. For a relatively low fee (typically around $9) there are online sites where you can fill out and scan in a template of your own handwriting to be converted into a usable font. I’ve tried fontifier.com and was happy with the results, but if you’d like more options, a quick Google search will turn up many more.

If you’re in a time crunch (or maybe your handwriting is a bit on the unreadable side) and need a good resource for attractive and unique handwriting fonts fast, you can head over to Font For Peas and download their impressive selection of Scrapbook fonts that can look quite nice as eLearning accent fonts.

Font for peas



Tracking Down That Perfect Font

Often when I see a website or a bit of eLearning that has nice design, I’ll save a screen shot of it for later inspiration. This is good, in theory, but sometimes I’ll come across a successful use of a font that I don’t immediately recognize (and I don’t have the time to figure it out). So when What the Font was brought to my attention, I got a little giddy. With this MyFonts beta site, I can take a screen shot of the font I’m hunting down and upload it to their site for analysis.

What the Font



Based on a character by character break down they provide a list of possible fonts as well as the origin of the fonts.

What the font 2



I’ve found the site to be pretty accurate and a definite design time saver.

Font Feedback


I received some great feedback last week from eLearning professionals on their favorite fonts. Here are the fonts our readers are using:

  • Verdana
  • Helvetica
  • Arial
  • Calibri
  • Times
  • Palatino
  • Times New Roman
  • Century Schoolbook (for print)
  • Comic Sans (for casual documents)


Share this article via your social media accounts:






***

About the author: AJ George is IconLogic’s lead Technical Writer and author of the book “PowerPoint 2007: The Essentials” and  “PowerPoint 2008 for the Macintosh: The Essentials.” You can follow AJ on Twitter at http://twitter.com/andrayajgeorge.

Camtasia 6: Why Won’t Some Gifs Work?

I received this email last week…

Question:

I'm
using Camtasia Studio 6. Suddenly some of my gif images won't go to the
Timeline. They import just fine, but I get a "codec" error when I try
to drag them to the Timeline. These images used to work just fine–they
haven't been updated in forever. What did I do wrong? Any ideas?

Answer:

You
didn't do anything wrong. According to TechSmith, the makers of
Camtasia, the culprit is a recent Windows Security Update (KB975560).
It seems that thanks to the update, some gif and jpeg images can no
longer be added to the Camtasia Timeline. The issue was fixed in the
new Camtasia Studio 7. However, TechSmith says that developers still
using Camtasia Studio 6 will need to convert any problematic gif images
to png before adding those images to projects.