Deskscribble

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Download Desktop Whiteboard for free. A virtual whiteboard for Windows PC. Sketch up ideas and take notes for your next project in one place: The Desktop Whiteboard. Scribble down design layouts and compare color themes, create storyboards, project graphics and text on screen, create animated cartoons, relieve your mind and practice your drawing skills. Deskscribble Deskscribble not only allows you to draw on top of your desktop and all open. $7.99 DOWNLOAD; Air Chalk NOTE: This app is the Air Chalk server for OS X (10.7 or above). DOWNLOAD; Chalkspiration Chalkspiration starts by automatically converting your image to chalky outlines. Paintbrush is a user-friendly and lightweight paint program. It is ideal for users who. Deskscribble not only allows you to draw on top of your desktop and ontop of all open windows, it is also an easy to use whiteboard, blackboard and you can even use it for your own and your kids' scribbles. Deskscribble is perfect for.

  1. Deskscribble Crack
  2. Deskscribble Windows

Screen Annotation & Screen Recording Solution for Presentations

Ink2Go is an extremely simple yet powerful screen annotation and recording software. You can easily write on top of any other application that is currently active on the desktop, even on a running video. You can then save your annotations as an image file or even record the whole session as a video for sharing. It is a useful tool for presenters to communicate and share ideas during a live session, for educators to create effective video tutorials and for salespeople to create impressive video presentations.
Ink2Go is available for both Windows (XP, Vista and 7) and Intel, Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) or later.
Watch the Ink2Go overview video
(created by Dr Tim Tyson, drtimtyson.com)
Free upgrade for existing user. Just install the latest trial version and your license key should still be valid after installation.
Free upgrade for existing user. Just install the latest trial version and your license key should still be valid after installation.

Features include:

Screen Annotation:
  • Let you write, draw or highlight on any content being shown on the desktop from any app, be it a webpage, a slideshow, a running video or even presentation mode of Keynote and Powerpoint.
  • Save the current desktop with your annotations as an image. Image formats: PNG, JPEG, Bitmap or GIF (for Windows), and PNG (for Mac OS X).
Screen Recording:
  • Record High-Quality video of entire desktop together with your annotation as a video.
  • Video formats: WMV (for Windows) and MOV (for Mac OS X).
  • Let you define a region of interest on the screen and only record within that region.
  • Record your voice from the microphone.
  • Allow pause and resume during a recording session.
Web Camera:
  • Toggle the webcam view on/off for recording. For a video presentation, showing your webcam view might help you connect better with your audience.
Whiteboard/Blackboard:
  • Toggle between your desktop screen and a whiteboard/blackboard with just a single-click. Helpful when you want to quickly show your idea on a clean page.
Multiple Pages:
  • Let you create a new page to annotate without destroying the current annotations. You can easily go back and forth between the created pages.
Multiple Monitors:
  • Allow you to annotate on extended or mirrored monitors.
Text Input:
  • Allow you to type text.
Intuitive UI:

  • Floating toolbar that can be moved around and switched between horizontal or veritcal, so that it never gets into the way of your presentation.
  • 8 pens, 4 highlighters and 3 erasers of various colors and sizes for your convenience.
  • Mouse mode that let you control other applications as per normal while your annotations are still showing on top.
Hotkeys:
  • Use Hotkeys to quickly switch among different tools without having to access the toolbar. The hotkey combination can be configured in the Preferences menu.
Deskscribble

When we first started creating content for online courses, annotated slides (like this one) were the most common type of video we produced. The free pen tool Omnidazzle wasn’t perfect, but it was flexible enough for what we needed to do. That software, however, is no longer supported and we’ve been looking for something that matches its flexibility and ease of use. We’ve found three so far that come close: Powerpoint, Ink2Go, and Deskscribble. These software were all tested on Macbook Pro running Sierra using a Wacom Cintiq 13HD as the presentation/annotation screen.

For our purposes, Powerpoint is the easiest one to recommend. By far, it is the easiest to use. Simply place your slideshow in presentation mode, hit Command + P and you’re good to go. When you advance to the next slide, your annotations are cleared and you’ll need to reactivate the pen again to do any annotations. It is built-in to the newest version of Powerpoint so it is essentially free if you’re already using that software, though this of course means you can’t use the tool to annotate over Keynote or anything else. Another downside is changing the pen color requires clicking into a pop-up menu and manually selecting one of nine default colors. The pen thickness is also not customizable.

Ink2Go is a $20 software that adds some more functionality but is not quite as seamless. For one, when your slides are in presentation mode, the software’s shortcuts are overridden by Powerpoint/Keynote’s. One of the benefits of using the Cintiq is that we can stack shortcuts on a single hotkey, like “erase annotations” and “advance slide.” Due to the way these software interact, however, the only way to erase slides in presentation mode is by manually clicking the erase button on Ink2Go’s overlay menu. So if you want to annotate every single slide differently, you’ll need to get in the habit of first clicking erase and then advancing the slide. This essentially requires the Ink2Go menu to always be on the screen (which I find slightly less professional). However, if your slides are in the 4×3 aspect ratio (as we recommend if you feature webcam video) the menu can be placed overtop of the letterboxed black bars on either side of your slides. Additionally, Ink2Go offers a few more colors, 4 thickness settings, and pressure-sensitive drawing. Ink2Go does include a screen recording function but you’re better off using Camtasia for anything serious.

One small glitch with Ink2Go: the presentation needs to be mirrored on the computer and the Cintiq or else there’s an odd glitch when attempting to annotate with the pen. I’ve reached out to the developers about this issue and will update here if it is resolved.

Deskscribble Crack

Deskscribble is a $10 software that works similarly to Ink2Go and features many of the same drawbacks. Again, shortcuts are overridden by the presentation software so you’ll have to manually erase slides before advancing them by using an overlay menu (which tucks in to the upper lefthand corner, inside the black bar of a 4×3 slide). It doesn’t pack in as many features as Ink2Go (most of which I found irrelevant for this particular use case) but it is half the price which is nice. To use this software, you will need to be on OSX 10.11 or higher (Ink2Go works on OSX 10.7+).

Deskscribble Windows

With Omnidazzle gone, we still haven’t found a perfect replacement: an app that works with both Powerpoint and Keynote in presentation mode, with no required overlay menu, whose configuration allows for erasing the canvas at the same time as advancing a slide. If you know of anything that might fit that bill, please comment below!





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