

Recent Posts Dia: An Open Source alternative to Visio Manage multiple terminal sessions with a single powerful tool Internet Monitoring and filtering doesn’t have to bleed your budget Security companies commit Anti-Virus 'Piracy' on unsuspecting users The VideoLAN project: bringing Media to your network Windows 7 Will Windows 7 upgrade strategy keep XP users away…NO! Fun with Windows 7 Why Windows 7 will crush Linux Why XP users will switch to Windows 7 Why IT will adopt Windows 7 See my lists of great tools 12 killer freebie SharePoint add-ons Five great Windows open source tools 8 little-known technologies that instantly make Microsoft shops run smoother 9 wickedly useful Web sites for Windows administrators 12 cool cross-platform tools for Windows, Macs and Linux 20 great Windows open source projects you should get to know A Better Windows World Tools Library Like this and want more? Check out the other tools I've written about in A Better Windows World. I will be doing so and I look forward to the latest versions. This is a project worth trying and keeping a very close eye on in the future. Greenshot is a great Open Source alternative that can help get the job dome and a fantastic ee. So I extend an invitation to the developers to add those two last features and this tool can very possible overtake its commercial competitors. But it is nice to have all the bells and whistles that are available. Then again many organizations use one tool for screen capture and then another for image editing. The large displays for region captures really rendered the need for cropping and resize a mute point. On the other hand, this project is still in beta. However, the editor does lack a crop and resize feature. I even liked how easy it was to add and delete elements.

The editor was great for adding objects and textboxes. Images can be sent to the clipboard or to a printer. Greenshot comes with an image editor and can save images in several different formats. Many times images need to be a specific size and often I need to capture the image or portions of and then use an editor to get the right screenshot. This made it easy to know that I was within my allotted space. The screen captures are really good, I particularly like that the 'capture region' tool highlighted the capture region and displayed the dimensions (in large numbers) for me as I was trying to capture an image.

So to me a tool like Snagit is essential to my work, I recently came across an Open Source alternative to Snagit, a software project called Greenshot. They say a picture is worth a thousand words and a screenshot certainly saves me pages of explanation or in some cases re-explanation. Being a writer I cannot think of any tool more important to me than a screenshot tool.

Keeping with the theme I started last week, I thought I would look at another Open Source alternative to a popular commercial software package.
