

I switched to PicPick after I used SnagIt for years. Select the default action after you capture a screenshot.Setup up an external program for use with the share functionality.PicPick supports Bitmaps, JPEG, and GIF images as well. Change default file name of screenshots and the default file format (png).Here are some of the things you may customize: Right-click on the system tray icon and select the "program options" entry to open them. The program's preferences offer extensive customization options. You can draw on the desktop and erase the drawing at any time the whiteboard feature comes without save option, however, and you cannot capture a screenshot either. Load the whiteboard tool to turn the whole desktop into a whiteboard. PicPick supports a couple of extras that I don't use personally. Supported are several cloud services, Twitter and Facebook, email and FTP, as well as any program available on the local system. You may save images to the local system or use the built-in share functionality to send images to other programs or services. The editor displays a pixel ruler and highlights the cursor position on the ruler that is excellent if you need to be very precise when it comes to edits. If you select a shape, you may change colors and thickness for instance. Most tools of the editor offer customization options. Add effects to the image, or resize / rotate it.Select any part of the image and use blur, pixelate, sharpen, or copy operations.Add shapes such as arrows, boxes, or highlighted areas.Add text (define font, size, color, and other formatting options).Here is a short list of useful tools that the image editor supports: The functions that I use the most are text, shapes (arrow) and blur, but there are plenty of others.
