The new SnagIt 8 has some great features for capturing Web sites or anything on your computer screen. You can mark off all or any part of a page or site and save that as a PDF file or Macromedia Flash document. This can then be stored or e-mailed.
But as they say on TV shopping sites: That’s not all you get. The real kicker with this screen capture is that all of the links remain active in the PDF copy. In short, you can e-mail the PDF or Flash to anyone, or simply keep it on file, and whatever links to other sites or information were in the original remain “live” in the copy. And you can add more information and live links of your own.
You can take a picture of a resort or a property for sale, for example, and make any part of that picture clickable to bring up more information or even take you to a Web site. You could click on a hotel wing to get room rates or pictures of the view from that room. You could click on a property for sale to get driving instructions, viewing hours, room sizes, etc. As you move the mouse cursor over a picture, areas that are clickable change colour slightly.
We experimented with a picture of boats under sail and made each one clickable with prices and other information we made up. Using one of the available file formats, we didn’t have to send the image as an attachment; it was part of the body of the e-mail.
The user interface is the easiest yet for the SnagIt series, and we had no trouble navigating it. If you’re not sure what to do, a little help message pops up in a couple of seconds. SnagIt 8 is from www.techsmith.com.
A two-ounce scanner
For the third or fourth time, we tried out a new version of the DocuPen portable scanner, and things are getting a little better.
The DocuPen is more like a wand than a pen, a slender 9-inch, 2-ounce rod with a built-in rechargeable battery. Place the scanning side of the rod over a piece of paper and move it steadily across. If you follow the instructions carefully, you will get a legible scan of whatever was on the paper. The scanner handles colors as well as black-and-white.
In practice, this worked fairly well with photos and clean pages with clearly legible dark type against a white or light-colored background. Newspaper and magazine pages often threw it for a loop, but once again, with care, we could get something legible. You can select a scanning resolution of 100 dpi to 400 dpi (dots per inch).
The DocuPen comes with 8 megabytes of memory and you can add more. That’s enough for quite a bit of scanned storage, and the information can be unloaded to the computer through an ordinary USB cable. The pen comes with the excellent PaperPort software, which includes OCR (optical character recognition) for reading scanned text. Once again, in practice there were always errors, but for the most part they were manageable.
Different models of the DocuPen run more than $100, depending on features and colour capability, at www.docupen.com. We found very little discount pricing from other vendors.
The thing that struck Bob most was that the designers of this little gadget had obviously never seen an old spy movie. You know, the kind where the secret agent whips out his miniature Minox camera and quickly photographs the enemy’s plans to take over the world.
The funny thing about that is that it actually works. You can take a photograph of any page and then use it just like a scan. With a digital camera, you can feed it right into the computer and use OCR software to “read” it. These days, you can use a high-resolution camera phone for the same purpose and even instantly transmit the image to another location.
Internuts
This site is for those people who are knot challenged. At www.iwillknot.com you will learn how to tie knots that won’t slip. Unless, of course, you want to make a slip-knot.
Girls who are geeks? At www.geekgirls.com the Geekgirl can tell you how to set up a home network and much more. Lots of tips on software, pod casting, utilities, VoIP, etc. Easy-to-understand advice and instruction.
A note from the ministry of digital defense
We got a letter from a reader who complained bitterly about the problems he had downloading and installing new software. Many people have written to us about such problems, and we know just what they’re talking about because, unfortunately, we actually run this stuff.
Most computer problems come from adding new software, not from viruses. This is the only business we can think of that puts out products with problems and then charges the customer for another product to fix the problems. Considering this has been going on since the dawn of computer time, two rules are worth repeating:
1. Never buy anything with a low serial number.
2. No matter what you get, you have to get something else to make it work.
What it boils down to is this: Don’t be too quick to upgrade to a new version of anything. If everything is working fine, leave it alone. There’s an old farmer’s adage that says, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”