If you’re looking for the easiest way to take screenshots or record your screen on a Windows PC, the Snipping Tool has you covered. This built-in utility has been part of Windows since Windows 7, and ...
The Snipping Tool is a handy feature in Windows that allows you to capture a snapshot of any portion of your screen. It’s not just a screenshot tool; it also provides options for annotating, saving, ...
Windows 11 Snipping Tool is gaining its much-awaited screen recording feature, allowing PC users to capture their screen in the video. The new screen record option is now available for testing. It is ...
Well now this will be useful! Microsoft is adding a text recognition function (OCR) to the Windows 11 Snipping Tool. The new feature will let you to copy text from screenshots and paste it into word ...
Gaming Monitors Best gaming monitors in 2025: the pixel-perfect panels I'd buy myself Gaming Monitors The 32-inch 4K OLED gaming monitor I desire most is nearly the cheapest it's ever been in the ...
There are two different ways to screenshot on Windows. The first option is the Print Screen button: to capture your entire screen, press the Windows key and the PrtScn key simultaneously. If your PC ...
If your Snipping tool is slow to open or work in Windows 11/10, then this post will help you fix this issue. This issue can be frustrating because if you want to take screenshots of games or videos ...
Microsoft is adding a long overdue function to Windows 11’s popular Snipping Tool (accessible via Win + Shift + R): The screen capture tool can now create animated GIFs directly. The new feature is ...
Using the Print Screen Key and pasting the captured screenshot still works in Windows 11, but you have other options that are easier and more convenient. I've been testing PC and mobile software for ...
Windows offers several built-in ways to take screenshots. Sure, you can just hit the Prt Scrn button on your keyboard to capture your entire screen, but if you want to screenshot a portion of your ...
The screen-capture utility built into Vista--and available for XP--has a couple of useful tricks up its sleeve. Dennis O'Reilly began writing about workplace technology as an editor for Ziff-Davis' ...