Screen Capture programs, as they are called, can be really complicated. I often avoid using them — especially on Windows. I can’t even remember offhand what the Windows keyboard shortcut is to grab an image of the screen. (This is much easier to do on a Mac.)
Best of all, I don’t have to remember. That is, not since I installed the simple, straightfoward gem of a free program on my main Windows computer. Bug Shooting is awesome. In addition to being simple and straightforward, it is easy to use and packs in a ton of features. Visit their website for more info.
It hides in your system tray while running — and places an icon on your desktop and in your startup folder during install. (Both of these are default options, but the intelligent and kind author of the Bug Shooting gives you the option to uncheck the startup folder and desktop icon items.)

This graphic was "shot" with Bug Shooting and took all of 4-5 minutes to create
You can invoke it with a command key (user definable), or simply right-click on the tray icon. If you left-click the tray icon, you get a screen shot of the active windows.
You can capture the entire screen, the active window, a specific area of the screen; or, use Bug Shooting to magnify an area of your screen. There is even a delayed capture feature. Once setup, Bug Shooting can be set to automatically upload all screen shots to the website of your choice (supported services are listed at the bottom of Bug Shooting home page).
You can even edit them by adding text, lines, freehand drawings, other images, etc — just as I did to the screen shot above. You can crop, flip, rotate and even add other photos or images to your capture. You can save your caputres as .jpg, .png, or .bmp files — or print them. Send a capture via Email? Yup! Can do! Capture something, click a button (after making one setting adjustment), and your email program will open a new window with the capture already attached and ready to go.
You’ll find a full feature list and tour at the site.
How might you use such a tool? Any number of ways. Use it to …
- take a screen shot of web page
- take a shot of an error message (super hot trick #207)
- don’t have time to write down an invoice number or something else on a web page or email AND your printer is not working, take a shot with Bug Shooting.
- want to show someone what your screen or desktop looks like?
- capture a graphic on a webpage that you might not otherwise be able to download
Recently, I needed to explain to someone how to do something in a program. I simply took a screen shot and circled the things they needed to click on and sent them that image. Done!
Yes, if you need to take a movie of your screen and add audio to it, you’ll need another tool. But for capturing any part of your screen and being able to do some nifty and simple edits to that capture, Bug Shooting is what I use.
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If you are wondering what the “RCP” at the front of the headline is all about, know that I give nicknames to and make acronyms for just about everything — especially that which I passionately like and dislike. Thus, RCP = Really Cool Program. Sometimes, it means Really Cool Product. But the RC is always “Really Cool”. Bug Shooting as a Screen Capture tool for Windows qualifies as a Really Cool Program. I absolutely love it.
What help finding more RCSTs (Really Cool Software Tools) for your computer or workflow? Tools that really make your computing life easier, smoother, faster, etc.? Just visit my contact page and submit your request, tell me your story or quandry, etc.