

"TechSmith's screencast service Jing goes pro". Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. "Jing Project reveals magic behind Net toil". Archived from the original on 7 June 2008. "Screencasting opens up new avenues netspeak". Archived from the original on 22 July 2014. "The Jing Project: The 3 Legged Dog of Screen Captures And Screencasting". Archived from the original on 11 December 2008. ^ "TechSmith Announces the Jing Project".^ a b c d "Download TechSmith Capture (Formerly Jing) for Free".TechSmith also changed the Jing product page to point to a new product named TechSmith Capture that performs a similar function. On 14 July 2020, Techsmith shut down the support for uploading to in line with the previously-announced end of support for Jing. All users (regardless of subscription) could use this service until 28 February 2013. In February 2012, Techsmith announced Jing Pro is to be retired. Unlike the free version, the professional version supports MPEG-4 saving, watermarks at the beginning and end of the video is not included, uploading to YouTube and working with cameras. On 6 January 2009, TechSmith released Jing Pro, which is a paid premium version of Jing. If uploaded to the web, the program automatically created a URL to the content so it could be shared with others. The software took a picture or video of the user's computer screen and uploaded it to the Web, FTP, computer or clipboard. Its simple format and the ability to upload captures instantly have made Jing useful in virtual library references. Users must create an account before they can use the software, which must be installed on their computer.

Jing was a screencasting computer program released in November 2007 as Jing Project by the TechSmith Corporation. NET Framework 3.5 with Service Pack 1 (Windows version) QuickTime 7.5.5 (Mac OS X version) But, since this task needs licensed software, I think this going to end up being a one-man brute-force effort./ 12 September 2015 7 years ago ( ) This seems like a great scenario for Amazon's Mechanical Turk. So, one little victory there is that it's fairly isolated. The SWF Converter won't pick up any computer sounds or music - it just records the audio coming out of the SWF movie. The saving grace of this process is that I can start the conversion process and then move the converter to the background so that I can do other work. Since the JING SWF file is a video-free, "interactive movie" that actually requires user-interaction in order to run, I think the SWF Converter for Mac is going to be my best bet. Not only is this going to be a time-intensive, manual, non-scriptable process but, I don't think there's any way around it. That giant Play button in the center is the JING tooling that is now forever-embedded in the converted MP4 video file. The bottom scrubber is the Quicktime playback.
