![]() ScreenFlick runs about $35 (well worth it for Mac users). This is now what I use for all my recordings and works great. It has the capability to record my monitor as shown (16:10), but then rescale it to 16:9 in the video as one of the options in the software. Screenflick uses a system extension called Screenflick Loopback to record system audio on your Mac. I am not sure which is the best for Windows, but on Mac I am using ScreenFlick. Screenflick is a macOS app focused on the core essentials of screen recording: providing the highest quality screen and audio capture, and delivering the key tools needed to communicate your screen experience to your viewers. ![]() (3) Get a more expensive and better screen recording software. (I have done this with my Macbook Pro in the past since it is natively 16:10 and not 16:9, but using the external monitor forces 16:9. Grab a cheap 17" or 20" monitor at the store, plug it in, and use that to record. (2) You can hook up a cheap external 1080p HD monitor. (Note: It will look weird to your while recording, but will look correct in the playback video.) ![]() This can be done through the Windows control panel. (1) It sounds like you are using a Windows PC with that strange laptop resolution, so you can configure your machine to scale down to 1080p (16:9) whlie you record it.
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