

- #SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING MAC OS X#
- #SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING MOVIE#
- #SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING SOFTWARE#
“Selection” takes a picture of an arbitrary rectangular area. “Screen” takes a picture of the entire screen. Their corresponding keys are 1 through 4.
#SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING MOVIE#
The palette, besides allowing you to change a wide range of preferences, has four main buttons: Screen, Selection, Objects, and Movie (if you pay for the movie option). The mouse may not always work in some applications (like games).

Once invoked, you can operate SPX with the mouse, or you can use the keyboard for the most common commands. SPX’s palette will appear and allow you to make several choices. Instead, you invoke it by pressing the usual Command-Shift-3-changeable to any other shortcut you like. While SPX is running, it does not appear in the dock. Because OS X does not support “Extensions” any more, you’ll either need to start SPX by hand for it to work, or you can just add it to the Login preferences in the System Preferences to have it automatically launched at every system start. Just mount the disk image by double-clicking it and drag (as instructed) the SPX folder to your hard drive. SPX can literally be installed in a snap. FatBits displays additional information about the capture, like the current location of the mouse pointer, the size of the selection, and a magnified view of the area around the cursor for more precise selections. Another new feature is the FatBits function, accessed by pressing Control while in any of SPX’s modes. Among the new features in Snapz Pro X are the abilities to add borders, drop shadows, thumbnails, and even overlays of watermarks or copyright messages. Screenshots can be scaled, cropped, color depth-changed, and dithered. Like Snapz Pro 2, SPX can also record the screen as a QuickTime movie.Īs expected from Snapz’ long and successful history, the features don’t stop here. Unlike Apple’s Grab, which can only save in TIFF format, SPX can save in BMP, PICT, GIF, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, PDF, and even Photoshop format. The first thing that stands out about Snapz Pro X (SPX) is its versatility in terms of the file formats it can save to. However, Snapz Pro 2 is still available to pre-OS X users.
#SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING MAC OS X#
As a result, the new Snapz Pro X runs on Mac OS X only. Or, rather than ported, Ambrosia has completely rewritten Snapz Pro X from scratch and added many new features in the process.
#SNAPZ PRO X STOP RECORDING SOFTWARE#
Luckily, Ambrosia Software has ported their popular Snapz screen capture utility to Mac OS X. Those who made the switch to Mac OS X have painfully become aware that Apple decided to do away with this useful feature and to replace it with the cumbersome Grab application. Many Mac users know what pressing Command-Shift-3 and Command-Shift-4 do: they take screenshots.

Upgrades from Snapz Pro 2 are $19 and $39 respectively. Price: $29 $49 with movie capture (can be upgraded later for price difference). Developer: Ambrosia Software ( product page)
