About us
English
Flip Screenshot on Surface Pro
Effortlessly Flip Screenshots on Surface Pro Devices
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
To flip a screenshot on your Surface Pro, use an image editor that supports transformations. Upload the screenshot and use the flip options to rotate the image as needed.
Yes, you can use your Surface Pro as a second monitor for another device by connecting both devices wirelessly or using a compatible cable, and accessing display settings to extend the screen.
To turn on the touch screen in Windows 10, go to Device Manager, find Human Interface Devices, right-click on HID-compliant touch screen, and select 'Enable'.
In Windows 11, enable the touch screen by navigating to Device Manager, locating the touch screen driver, right-clicking, and selecting 'Enable'.
If flipping a screenshot isn't working, verify software compatibility and ensure you're using an updated image editor that supports flipping operations.
For Surface Pro 3, upload your screenshot to an online or desktop image editor, select the flip function, and choose the desired orientation change.
Yes, Surface Go screenshots can be flipped using any image editing tool that offers flip or rotate functionalities.
Use the Photos app or third-party software like Paint to flip images on Windows 10 by accessing edit functions to perform flips or rotations.
Access display settings by right-clicking on the desktop and selecting 'Display settings.' There, you can configure screens as primary or secondary and adjust orientations.
Surface Pro devices can flip screens using built-in Windows tools or external software that supports image rotation and flipping.
Yes, you can use an online annotation tool or apps like OneNote to annotate images directly on the Surface Pro, drawing or adding notes as needed.
Most Surface Pro models support touchscreen features, but ensure your device is not in tablet mode or settings haven't disabled them.
For online tools, there might be a size limit. Ensure your file size is under the tool's limit, often around 100 MB, for optimal performance.
No, to use OCR on Surface Pro, you need software capable of optical character recognition, as built-in support is not provided.
No, to flip images in batch, use software that supports bulk editing. Surface Pro handles one image at a time unless otherwise specified by software.