

You can try Snagit for free for up to 14 days though, so depending on what you need, give it a shot-you may decide it’s well worth the price. That’s quite a bit of moolah for a screenshot app, no matter how powerful it is. Snagit is probably the most powerful screenshot application on the Mac, so why is it here at the bottom? Its $49.95 price tag (ouch). Free and open source software for video recording and live streaming.


Open external Editor opens the image in any installed program capable to work with png format. Free to download programs that can replace or work as Monosnap alternatives. It can not only take screenshots and add a dizzying array of annotations, but it can also take and trim video recordings, create animated GIFs, take scrolling captures (full screen snaps of stuff that you have to scroll to see), take panoramic captures (for wide horizontal or infinitely scrolling pages), and much more. Open Monosnap Editor selected by default Save screenshot saves the image to default folder or opens a dialogue Upload instantly uploads to the cloud or to FTP/SFTP/WebDAV server. Snagit gives you pretty much everything you could ever need. So if you don’t need a full-fledged screenshot app with all those other bells and whistles, you might give Captur a whirl. It’s only slightly more advanced than macOS’ built-in offerings, but in just the right places. For example, you can easily change the file format, destination, default file name, as well as add times and dates to all your captures. It sits in the menu bar giving you just a few more options in addition to your Mac’s own native screenshot powers. The name of the game with Captur is simplicity.
