Create sportscaster-style speech critique videos with Camtasia [Tutorial]

Sportscasters sometimes make sports interesting to watch with their instant replays, on-screen pen drawings and playback narratives. After watching some recent political speeches and reading articles like this one on FoundRead about politicians’ body language, I wondered - what if speech instructors could use the same sportscaster-style tools to critique speeches? Invite some students to play the part of the “sportscasters” and you have an assignment students not only enjoy doing, but contribute to the content of the course. Have different students participate each week over the course of the class, and you have a video podcast the class can publish. Here’s a quick example of what your class could create using Camtasia.

Get the Flash Player to see this player.

The magic sauce for creating this type of video is the ScreenDraw tool. To make this tool easily available, click on View > Annotation Toolbar in the Camtasia Recorder window:

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camtasia2After you begin recording the screen, enable the annotation tools by clicking on the ScreenDraw icon on the Annotation toolbar. This gives you access to several screen-drawing tools, including a free-form drawing pen, several shape tools, a highlight tool and an arrow tool, all with configurable widths and colors. You can access the different tools and options by right-clicking inside the area you are recording:

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For more information on how to use the annotation tools, see Techsmith’s online documentation.

Do you have creative uses for Camtasia in the classroom? I’d love to hear them - share them in the comments below!

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Embedded Flash Video Test

This is a video I put together for a faculty update meeting to get people excited about using technology in classes, like podcasting. With some help from Todd Washburn of Weedkiller fame, I filmed 30 minutes of footage in front of chroma green fabric, added audio and video effects and cut it down to almost 2 minutes. Using a Max Headroom-esque video style made things easier - no need to worry about jumpcuts.

By the way, as a test, I’m hosting this video from my server using FlowPlayer. Our institution uses a hosted version of Blackboard which charges for disk space and bandwidth, so I am exploring ways of embedding hosted video, audio and PowerPoint resources into courses without using our host’s space and bandwidth. So far, I’m pleased with FlowPlayer, and am investigating other alternatives.

CNet’s Webware Awards - Vote for your favorite Web 2.0 app

CNet’s Webware has posted a poll where users can vote for their favorite Web 2.0 apps. The apps are split into 10 categories, with 25 apps listed in each category - holy overload, Batman! While the list includes some non-Web 2.0 apps (Internet Explorer!?!? Come on….), it does include some services worth reviewing. I thought I’d start by listing the contestants by category, pick the one I think is the winner, then start reviewing some of the more interesting services. We’ll see if my picks change after taking a hard look at some services I’ve not yet joined.

Webware’s choices are split into the following categories:

Browsing
They’ve included several non-Web 2.0 apps here, including Internet Explorer, Firefox and Opera. I still use Bloglines, but most of the masses seem to have moved on to Netvibes or Google Reader. LeapTag is an interesting project, StumbleUpon seems to have enjoyed a resurgence in popularity, OpenID is gaining traction (but I fail to see why it’s a Web 2.0 app), and Yahoo Pipes is a potentially revolutionary app. This is a tough one, but I’d have to pick Yahoo Pipes.

Communication
Several non-Web 2.0 apps here, along with some heavy-hitters - Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Twitter and Skype are all likely candidates in my book. While there are other interesting projects on the list, like Zimbra, Jaiku and Meebo, they don’t have the popularity of the heavy-hitters. The widget-based platforms like Netvibes and Pageflakes (where’s iGoogle, by the way?) show a lot of promise, but aren’t simple enough to attract non-techies yet. My pick - either Skype or Gmail, although that perplexingly-popular Twitter will probably win.

Community
Not so long ago, this would have been an easy category to narrow down to a short-list between MySpace, Del.icio.us and Digg. With Facebook’s recent re-launch and the resulting exodus from MySpace, that may be a serious contender as well. I’ve used DeviantArt for years and never considered it a Web 2.0 app, but I suppose it does have some of the characteristics. Bebo seems to be picking up steam, and MyBlogLog is gaining popularity after Yahoo announced some upgrades. Other recognizable services, including Ning, LinkedIn, Reddit and Netscape, don’t have the popularity to beat the top three. My pick - Digg.

Data
There’s some pretty innovative stuff here, like Swivel’s data-sharing and exploration tools, and BlinkX’s video search. Most of these services are pretty esoteric though - you’re pretty much guaranteed to be a techie if you know about them, let alone can use them. Popularity and service recognition will be a problem with most of these services - except one. Winner - Google. ’nuff said.

Entertainment
Where the hell is Joost?? It can’t be excluded due to beta status - several other included services are in beta as well. And it can’t be because it’s “not Web 2.0 because you download a client” - they included IE7 for Pete’s sake! This is a weak category - a bunch of game sites, video blogs and party planners. Really, what makes watching Major League Baseball or some dude with a hat-cam Web 2.0? Most entries are neither innovative nor useful; some, like Midomi are innovative but not really useful and others, like Upcoming are useful but not really innovative. ABC and CBS have large audiences to pimp their apps to, but I doubt most members of that TV audience know of or care about this contest. My vote would go for MyPunchBowl for combined usefulness and innovativeness, but the Kevin Rose effect will probably carry Revision 3 for the win.

Media
A lot of ground-breaking services have entered this space - it’s becoming overrun, in fact, with startups concentrating on video and photo sharing and editing. We all know about YouTube, particularly after the buzz surrounding Google’s purchase and Viacom’s lawsuit. Flickr is another popular service with recent buzz. Right behind those two in name recognition are Pandora (who recently announced deals with Sansa, Sprint and Sonos), PhotoBucket (who was recently blocked, permitted and bought by MySpace and now has a Facebook F8 app), Napster (who was insanely popular during the wild-west days of filesharing and has been trying to capitalize on that popularity ever since it turned legit) and Amazon’s UnBox service. Several entries have created apps for Facebook’s new F8 platform, including Photobucket, iLike, Mog, PikNik and Slide. For sheer name recognition, media attention, popularity, Google’s backing and features, my pick goes to YouTube.

Mobile
I have to admit, not only do I not know many of these services, I don’t care to. I recognize cell phones as the next unconquered territory, but I use mine for calls and that’s it. Besides, whatever company signs on with the iPhone will be the next big thing. I see a few interesting entries like Google’s free 411 service (it’s interesting that Jangle’s service is not included in this category), Google Maps Mobile, KushKash (a money-management app that recently received $11M private investing), TellMe (another free 411 service) and Yahoo’s OneSearch. Personally, I think any service that relies on GPS (which I suspect most cell phone users still don’t want to activate) or provides media (music, games, movies, etc) isn’t a good bet just yet - not enough people want to participate in that sort of stuff. Market penetration into this category of consumers requires something useful, practical, easy to use and not requiring a user to install an app on the phone - thus, my pick goes to TellMe.

Productivity and Commerce
Wow, here’s an open field with a lot of strong contenders. Google’s got three entries with Adwords, Calendar and Docs & Spreadsheets. eBay has two entries with eBay and PayPal. Other entries backed with gobs of name recognition and popularity include Amazon, Microsoft Office Live, , Yahoo Calendar and . Even some of the lesser-known services are heavy-hitters in their own right: Zillow and Trulia offer real estate tools and searches; Craigslist has a huge following of people looking for local job listings and classifieds; business apps SalesForce and BaseCamp (which hails from 37signals, known for Ruby on Rails and other business-centric apps); and other Docs-style apps, including Zoho, ThinkFree and EditGrid. One interesting entry has no competitor entries: Farecast, an airfare-comparison app I use quite a bit, but doesn’t have the name recognition of most other entries. This is a tough category to call, and you have to take into account the types of people who will vote for their app-of-choice - business people, for instance, aren’t likely to take the time to vote for Basecamp or Salesforce. Google and eBay may have huge followings and multiple entries, but considering none of the most popular services are advertising the contest on their sites, and taking into account the viral nature of Amazon’s community, my bet’s on Amazon.

Publishing
Is there a Google stone left unturned? Blogger, Feedburner (you did know Google bought them, right?) and Google Analytics all make the list. Adobe’s Flash and Microsoft’s Silverlight (why didn’t Adobe’s Apollo make the cut) round out the big names, and many services known to few non-bloggers (including Vox, Widgetbox, Tumblr and the infamous PayPerPost) vie for eighth place. This category, however, is all about Drupal vs Wordpress - both have large followings, are directly and indirectly advertising the poll to their users (Wordpress is advertising here) and are supported by incredibly viral and loyal communities. Backed by the Wordpress.com community, my money’s on Wordpress.

Reference
Map and local search apps get a strong showing - Ask.com (who has adopted some viral marketing lately), Google, Microsoft and Yahoo all have entries. Venerable IMDb and WebMD are present. Some recent upstarts gaining news also make an appearance, including Geni (family-tree startup by PayPal’s former COO David Sacks, gaining news and funding), Instructables (funded by Tim O’Reilly’s OATV and frequently featured on Lifehacker) and RapLeaf (a reputation tracker who made the first Facebook F8 cut). However, my bet’s on Wikipedia, who should have the recognition beyond web-heads and viral popularity to handily win this category.

Conclusion

There are some interesting entries that definitely deserve a review. It would also be interesting to see a breakdown of entries by owner and funding source - maybe I can throw one together over the next couple of days.

Who are your picks? Tell me in the comments below.