
"I often have to record screen activity in Windows for a tutorial, demonstration, or online class. If you're creating a presentation, devising a how-to video, or cooking up something for YouTube, you might want to record your screen activity in Windows as well. A host of third-party tools can handle that job -- some free and some paid. But rather than download and install an external program, you can take advantage of a couple of features built directly into Windows."
"Available in Windows 10 and 11, the Game Bar video-capture tool is designed to record gameplay on your PC. But it's a versatile tool that will capture just about any other type of screen activity. With Game Bar, you can easily record your screen, turn on the microphone to grab your voice or other audio, and save the recording to your PC."
Windows provides built-in screen-recording tools so users do not need to install external programs. The Game Bar, available in Windows 10 and 11, records gameplay and any other screen activity, captures microphone audio, and saves clips as MP4 files that can be managed and played back within the Game Bar interface. Windows 11's Snipping Tool also supports screen recording and saves output as MP4. These native utilities simplify recording, editing, and sharing screen content for tutorials, demonstrations, online classes, presentations, and videos for platforms like YouTube.
Read at ZDNET
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