![]() ![]() If you’re watching a presentation and the presenter has provided you with Keynote, PowerPoint, or PDF slides ahead of time, you can load those slides into Pear Note by dragging the presentation file into the Pear Note window. Similarly, Pear Note doesn’t auto-scroll the text area when the cursor travels beyond the visible text you have to manually scroll to keep up. First, sometimes it’s difficult to follow along in the text during playback, because Pear Note highlights only one character at a time I’d prefer if Pear Note highlighted the entire line containing the current text, with a more-obvious highlight for the current character. However, there are a couple issues with the way the feature is implemented. This linking of text with audio and video is immensely useful I would have loved to have something like this when I was in college, and it’s also valuable for business meetings, training sessions, or any other event where you might want a recording of the event to go with your notes. If you import media into a Pear Note document that already contains recorded audio or video, you can choose to add the new media to the beginning or end of the existing media, or to replace it (for example, if you find a better recording of the same event). Similarly, you can import any QuickTime-supported audio or video file into Pear Note and then type notes as you listen or watch. You can also use Pear Note to record an event and then add your notes at a later time those notes will be synchronized with the recording just as if you’d taken them during the event. ![]() (You can control playback during editing using the playback controls or keyboard shortcuts.) When adding text to a note post-recording, that new text is treated-for the sake of playback-as if it was typed at the same time as the surrounding text. Once you’ve found that location, clicking the padlock icon at the bottom of the window puts you in unlocked mode, which lets you edit, but disables the click-to-position-playback feature. You use locked mode, which doesn’t allow you to edit text, to find a particular location in your recording. ![]() Pear Note’s text-editing area has two modes, locked and unlocked. You can use the playback buttons, as well as the playhead (scrubber) slider, to skip to any part of the recording and see what you were typing at the time.īut even more useful is that this also works conversely: If, while reading through your notes, you realized that you missed something that was said or shown, simply click on that place in the text Pear Note automatically skips to that exact moment in your recording, letting you watch or listen to the desired portion of the event without having to manually scan through the audio or video to find it. When you play back your recording, Pear Note “follows along” in your notes by highlighting the character you were typing at each moment. It also tracks the exact time in the recording that you typed each character of your notes. But Pear Note doesn’t just record audio and video. These text-editing and recording options aren’t groundbreaking. Via Pear Note’s preferences dialog, you can choose the audio and video sources (for example, if you have both a built-in iSight and a DV camera connected), as well as the audio- and video-recording quality you can also choose to have video flipped horizontally when recorded. ![]() Simply click on the Record button to start recording, and then take notes as you normally would. At the top of the window are the recording and playback controls. An audio meter shows the level of the current recording and a video panel lets you see the video being recorded. To the right you choose whether to record audio, video, or both. The rest of the window hosts Pear Note’s recording features and settings. ![]()
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