우리에 대해
한국어
Reverse Screenshot in Laptop
Effortlessly reverse and annotate laptop screenshots
또는 파일을 끌어다 놓기
PDF 및 이미지 파일 형식 지원 (최대 100MB)
전 세계 수백만 명이 신뢰하는
4.4
G2에서 2,100개 이상의 리뷰
4.4
Capterra에서 8,200개 이상의 리뷰
4.4
앱 스토어에서 73,000개 이상의 리뷰
2.5억
등록된 사용자
50억
생성된 노트
200만
매일 생성된 노트
자주 묻는 질문
A reverse screenshot involves capturing your screen and then flipping or mirroring the image. This technique is often used for presentations or to meet specific visual requirements.
To reverse a screenshot on Windows 11, capture the image using snipping tools and then edit it with an image editor to flip horizontally.
Yes, you can use browser-based annotation tools to mark up and edit screenshots taken on your laptop without installing additional software.
Capture the screenshot using your preferred tool, then open it in an image editor. Use the flip or mirror function to reverse the image.
While in Safe Mode, screenshot functionality depends on minimal drivers. Editing or reversing requires opening your image editor after returning to normal mode.
Use text and shape annotation tools to add comments and visual cues to your laptop screenshots. This aids in feedback and clarity.
Yes, after reversing a screenshot, you can upload it to an online annotation tool to add highlights, arrows, and text labels.
Common image formats such as JPG, JPEG, PNG, and WEBP support annotation. Ensure your reversed screenshot is saved in one of these formats.
Adjust your camera settings through the camera software on your laptop. Look for mirror or flip options often available in camera settings.
Yes, while using external monitors, you can capture and annotate screenshots from either the laptop or any attached monitor with the tool.
Yes, the browser-based annotation tool is accessible for both Windows 10 and 11, using Chrome, Firefox, or other supported browsers.
Yes, project your laptop screen and capture screenshots as usual. Annotations can be added afterward using browser-based tools.
No, you cannot directly edit text in screenshots. Instead, use annotation tools to add comments or notes over the image.
No, the annotation tool is designed for desktop use on browsers like Chrome or Firefox.
No, the tool processes one file at a time. Annotate and download before starting a new session with another file.