A convenient screenshot tool can make you more efficient at work. For me, I used to use the screenshot function on the chat tool to take screenshots directly and copy them into the chat box, but I always felt that this was inefficient - and it could only be saved in jpg mode. It was very troublesome to change it to pdf or other modes, and it could not be operated in batches. Regarding this problem, today the editor will bring you a very practical browser screenshot tool-FireShot. So what is FireShot? What is Fireshot good for?
First of all, Fireshot is a very practical web screenshot tool that can improve everyone's efficiency and is easy to use (it can screenshot the entire page, visible part, and selected area). It's a browser plug-in, which means you can take screenshots without opening the chat tool. Not only that, it can also provide comments and annotations. It can be said to be very practical.
So now that we know what FireShot is, how do we use it? In fact, the usage of FireShot is very simple. We just need to click on the plug-in (taking Chrome as an example) and select what we need.
Then it is mainly divided into three uses. The first one is to capture the entire page: capture the entire current page. The captured page is perfect, which is why many people use FireShot to replace the Comments & Annotations plug-in, because the Comments & Annotations plug-in has obvious splicing marks when capturing the entire page, and FireShot perfectly solves this problem. The second is to capture the visible part: capture the current window page. The last one is to capture the selected area: you can use the mouse to select the screenshot area, which is the same as the chat tool screenshot, but what makes it better than the chat tool screenshot is that FireShot can drag the loading page and capture more areas than the current page. I feel this is very useful.