While free-handing, Snagit provides a real-time picture-in-picture zoom window, so it’s easy to see the exact starting and stopping point that’s being selected on a pixel level. Once active, Snagit will try to “snap” its focus to whatever window or field the mouse cursor is hovering over and capture just that area with a single click, or free-hand a selection prior to clicking. Snagit loads on Windows startup, takes relatively little memory (less than 50 megabytes on test machines) and invokes a simple interface at the press of the Print Screen key. TechSmith, its developer, recognized the need for end users to create and save screen shots and has enjoyed more than 20 years of success providing new and effective means to facilitate this. Released to the general public as shareware in 1990, Snagit was perhaps the first legitimate screen-capture utility of its time. Screen shots quickly and effectively convey ideas that can otherwise be difficult to articulate, saving time and eliminating the ambiguity that can derail even the best of instructions. Once considered little more than a curiosity, screen-capture utilities are changing the way businesses write documentation - and for good reason.
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