Showing posts with label Snagit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snagit. Show all posts

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Snagit 11 Adds New Tools to Its Bag of Screen (and Video) Capture Tricks

Think that there's no way to improve the world's best image- and video-capture program? You're wrong. The new version of Snagit adds video-capture and video-output tools and a variety of other more minor features to its already considerable set of tricks, and the result is an even better program that anyone who needs to capture images or screen animations will want to use.

Snagit 11 screenshotSnagit 11's video capture is easy to understand and use.The biggest news is the ability to capture video from your screen, and then upload them directly to YouTube, or else to any other site using a simple built-in FTP upload tool. So if you need to capture a sequence of events on your computer, such as for creating a tutorial on how to use a particular piece of software or accomplish a certain task, Snagit does it for you.

Capturing video is exceptionally easy. Use a hot key combination, or else right-click the Snagi-It icon in the System Tray and select Capture Video. Then select the area of the screen you want to capture (or capture the entire screen), and begin recording. Press a hotkey combination, or click a button to stop capturing. You can also pause and restart recording.

Once you're done, you can upload the video to YouTube from directly inside Snagit. (You'll of course need a YouTube account to do this.) The built-in FTP tool also makes it easy to upload the video to any site that uses FTP.

There's more than just that, though. Vendor TechSmith has added more "stamps," such as new starbursts, to Snagit's editor. You can also download free add-ins from the Snagit site so you can easily share screen captures with others via Facebook and Twitter. There are also new tools for image capture and editing, including easier resizing of screen captures.

Snagit clearly bests lower-cost competitors Screenshot Captor and FastStone Capture. Free/donationware Screenshot Captor's interface is more confusing than Snagit's, and it requires more work to capture and annotate screens. It also won't let you capture video. FastStone Capture ($20) lacks the full complement of screen annotation tools that Snagit has and doesn't have as many capture options--for example, you can't automatically capture images from a Web page. Neither of those two programs allow you to set up profiles for quickly capturing screens or videos--for example, one profile for capturing video, another for capturing a scrolling page, and so on. And they don't have all the tricks in Snagit's advanced tool set, such as the ability to convert graphics formats between one another; nor does either have a library that displays all of your previous captures, letting you browse through them and annotate and edit any you want. On the other hand, you can't beat Screen Captor's price--it's free. And FastStone Capture, at $20, is less than half the price of Snagit's. But if you're more concerned with features than price, Snagit is the one to get.

As with previous versions of Snagit, you can capture specific regions, windows, a full screen, scrolling windows, menus, entire Web pages, and videos. Pretty much whatever you see on your screen, you can grab. It includes many options, such as a capture timer and the ability to choose whether to include cursors. And there are plenty of editing tools as well, notably tools for annotating screen captures.

One returning feature I especially like is the time-saving "All-in-One Capture" feature . Rather than setting up the type of capture (full-screen Web page, window, and so on) in advance, you can instead use the "All-in-One Capture" hotkey or icon, and then decide on the fly what to grab.Another perennial favorite feature is Snagit's "transparency," which lets you capture and use graphics without their background colors so you can blended them more easily into your projects.

That's not to say that everything is perfect with Snagit 11. It records video in the MP-4 format, which although it is a common standard, does not play in Windows Media Player.

Still, that's a minor fault. Snagit is still the screen capture program to get. And if you already have a previous version of Snagit, it's well worth the upgrade.

--Preston Gralla


From PCWorld. Visit Amazon Computer and Notebook Center here

Monday, March 19, 2012

Free Screenshot Captor Trounces $50 Snagit

Taking screenshots is an addictive habit: It's something many people don't do, but once you get started, you will probably find yourself taking them all the time. Screenshots are great for illustrating software bugs, showing a relative or friend how to do something on the computer, documenting your astounding gaming feats and records, and dozens of other daily uses. Screenshot Captor (free) lets you take many kinds of screenshots, and in some ways it performs even better than the screenshot industry's 800-pound gorilla, Snagit ($50).

One of the trickiest tasks for a screenshot application is to take a screenshot of a scrolling window. Let's say you're trying to save an image of a webpage that takes up several screen lengths: Your screenshot application would have to be smart enough to scroll the window, take multiple screenshots, and then stitch them together into one seamless image, eliminating duplicate content.

Screenshot CaptorScreenshot Captor offers an advanced (if tricky) interface for capturing scrolling windows.In Screenshot Captor 3.0, scrolling capture was reworked from the ground up, and I couldn't resist pitting it head-to-head against Snagit. In terms of UI, Snagit is far slicker: Just hover over a scrolling area and a double-arrow icon shows up. Click the icon, Snagit scrolls the area, takes a screenshot, and you're done. Screenshot Captor uses a much more involved interface in which you test the window for scrolling methods beforehand, take the screenshot, and then stitch the image back together once the screenshot was taken, with full control over the stitching process.

I first tried to take a screenshot of a webpage shown in Opera. Snagit flat-out refused to work: The double-arrow icon simply didn't show up. Screenshot Captor reported that Opera wouldn't respond to normal scrolling actions, so I just told it to send PgUp/PgDn keypresses. That worked fine, and produced a beautiful screenshot. Screenshot Captor 1, Snagit 0.

My next test was capturing a screenshot of art website Ffffound.com shown in Chrome. I picked Ffffound because it's a long webpage, and because it often contains animated GIFs. Snagit scrolled the page briskly and produced a screenshot. Sadly, it was confused by an animated GIF, producing multiple copies of it one after the other, effectively breaking the screenshot. Worse yet, Snagit doesn't offer easy tools for fixing such errors.

Screenshot Captor scrolled much faster than Snagit, and it caught the animated GIF mid-frame: There was no duplication. There were some image issues near the bottom of the page, most of which I easily fixed using Screenshot Captor's post-processing stage. The end result was a beautiful screenshot of a page containing an animated GIF. Screenshot Captor 2, Snagit 0.

Scrolling image capture is just one of Screenshot Captor's features. Screenshot Captor can also save an individual screenshot of every control (button, text area, and so on) in the target window automatically, or just take a simple screenshot of the active window or any region of the screen. The application also features a built-in image editor with simple annotation tools such as arrows and text boxes, and supports free utility ZUploader (from the makers of ZScreen) for uploading images to hosting services.

In terms of UI, you won't find many bells and whistles. Screenshot Captor is a no-nonsense utility, containing plenty of options, buttons, and controls and very little visual flair. The buttons are clearly labels, and helpful hints explain tricky points. The author, Mouser, also created a series of screencasts showing how to use some of the tools.

If you don't mind the initial learning curve, you'll find Screenshot Captor 3 to be a very capable screenshot application that makes things as simple while still providing enough tools to obtain professional-looking results.

--Erez Zukerman


From PCWorld. Visit Amazon Computer and Notebook Center here