106 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3976
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Title: HPR3976: The Evolution of Windows' Snipping Tool
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3976/hpr3976.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:11:14
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3976 from Monday the 30th of October 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, The Evolution of Windows Snipping Tool.
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It is hosted by Keith Murray and is about six minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, KD gives some history of the evolution of screenshot capabilities on Windows.
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In an ever-evolving technology landscape, something that has remained a need for many people,
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regardless of platform, is a reliable screenshot tool.
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My primary computing environment has been and still is Microsoft Windows.
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For a long time, the screenshot story on Windows was pretty poor.
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When I first dove into Mac OS back in the early 2000s, I was pleasantly surprised that
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my MacBook did a much better job of capturing screens than my old XP machine had done.
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I'm not super familiar with how this was done back on Linux distros back at that time,
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but I would imagine the capabilities were similar, even though it was almost 20 years ago.
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Thankfully, things were about to improve in the Windows ecosystem too, and the story
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has a bit of an unlikely hero.
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The much-maligned Windows Vista would provide a great new feature for Windows users.
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The Snipping Tool.
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So let's cast our minds back to the old days of Windows XP in the earlier 16-bit versions
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of Windows.
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This is the era where the tools were so bad, they live on as a disturbing sense memory
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in the minds of many to this day.
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The old screenshot method was a blunt hammer, lacking any nuance and offering virtually
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no real options for image manipulation.
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It was simple to use by pressing the otherwise useless print screen key that existed on most
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PC keyboards, but that would cause a bitmap image of the current screen to be placed on the
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Windows clipboard where it could then be pasted into something like Microsoft Paint if you
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wanted to save the image or something like Microsoft Word to be cropped into a document.
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But since most applications couldn't accept the image data directly for most people, those
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were really your only two options.
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With the launch of Windows Vista in 2007, Microsoft decided it was time to fix this long-standing
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deficiency in Windows tooling and bring this essential feature into the 21st century,
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and thus the Snipping Tool was born.
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Side note, yes, the Snipping Tool was actually previously available as a power toy in Windows
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XP and Windows tablet edition a few years before, but Vista was the first mainstream release
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and where most people finally got their hands on it.
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The Snipping Tool was designed to replace the old print screen command, which often required
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users to fumble with Microsoft Paint or other applications to deal with the massive bitmap
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files.
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The two main features of the Snipping Tool hadn't been previously available on Windows.
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The first was that screenshots were saved to disk as an image file automatically.
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It also defaulted to PNG files rather than the bulkier and far less useful bitmap.
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If you don't need the files clogging up your disk, you can set them to go only to the
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clipboard and just save them from the Snipping Tool UI as needed.
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But arguably, the more critical and useful feature was that you could now freeze the screen
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and draw a box of any arbitrary size around whatever portion of the screen you wish to capture,
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be it a window, a line of text, an entire screen, or even spanning across multiple displays.
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This new fan flexibility made capturing and sharing screen content infinitely easier.
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Another valuable addition in later versions of Windows was the Snip and Sketch tool.
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A small desktop image manipulation program that enables users to make quick and easy modifications
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to captured images.
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With a small pop-up in the corner of your screen, you could access the tool and enhance
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the screenshots before sharing them.
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The captured content is readily available in the clipboard, making it easy to paste into
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various applications from messaging tools like Discord and Slack to email programs to
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document editors.
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This was originally designed to be part of the Windows 10 ink workspace, but is useful
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in other scenarios too.
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Snipping Sketch was to a supersede at the Snipping Tool, but Microsoft left both in place,
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keeping the older tool as a non-default option in Windows 10.
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For me, this is just a built-in part of my workflow.
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The new keyboard shortcut, Windows key plus shift plus S, will trigger the crosshairs
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and allow me to select any part of the screen that I need to capture.
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I can paste that capture into pretty much any application I want.
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Very rarely, I'll use the Snipping Tool UI to mark up the image with some arrows or something,
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but for the most part, I just use them as is for documentation and chat conversations,
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or as a reference image in an email to demonstrate something to a calling on Slack.
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For the most part, it's completely seamless.
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Finally, while not really a screenshot capability, the tool also allows for the capture of video
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in any arbitrary portion of the screen.
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I've most often used this when showing people how to perform a particular task, where
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some menu option might get buried on a website.
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Recently, Windows 11 has renamed Snipping Sketch to the Snipping Tool, completing the circle
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and sealing the fate of the original Vista era screenshot application.
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The current version shares most of its features with the earlier versions, mostly having been
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updated for the more modern cross-platform Windows UI frameworks.
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It's nice to see something actually getting retired and shut down once the new tool arrives,
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not leaving the legacy version to languished well past its useful lifetime.
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The Snipping Tool has come a long way in its journey to become an essential part of
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the Windows ecosystem.
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It's made capturing and sharing screenshots easier, more efficient, and kept the Windows
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experience consistent with the majority of the other operating systems that already
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have good screen capture capabilities.
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I've included links for a number of the things that I've mentioned today in the show notes
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over at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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If you're curious to deep dive any parts of the journey that I've talked about today,
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head on over to the website and check it out.
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While you're there, if you have any history or knowledge about possibly little known features
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of your favorite software or operating system, record us a show for Hacker Public Radio and
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tell us all about it.
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Until next time, this is Katie Murray for Hacker Public Radio.
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Thanks for listening.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an onstoast.com, the internet archive and
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rsync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released on their creative commons, attribution 4.0
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