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한국어
Reverse Screenshot in Linux
Effortlessly Reverse Screenshot Using Ubuntu Terminal
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
Reverse screenshot generally means using a screenshot as a background to annotate or reverse-engineer design elements. In Linux, especially Ubuntu, you can use terminal commands alongside our browser-based annotation tool to achieve this.
While precise 'reverse screenshot' methods vary, you can use Linux terminal to manage and manipulate screenshots within the Ubuntu environment before using our tool to annotate and alter them.
Yes, upload your screenshot to our browser-based tool, utilize the annotation options such as text, pen, and shapes, and then download your annotated image seamlessly.
While the tool does not support reverse-engineering, you can take screenshots on Ubuntu using terminal commands, then annotate key sections to analyze contents visually.
Our tool supports annotating images in .jpg, .jpeg, .png, and .webp formats, allowing flexibility in choosing the screenshot file format to upload for annotation.
Ubuntu's terminal can manage screenshots via commands like 'gnome-screenshot'. Once you have your screenshot, upload it for annotation in the browser.
Absolutely, after uploading your Linux screenshot, use the pen tool available to draw and mark directly on the image without any extra software installation.
Yes, you can use our browser-based tool on Ubuntu desktops. Just capture your screenshot in Ubuntu and upload it to annotate and modify as needed.
No, our annotation tool is fully web-based. No need to install any software; you can upload, annotate, and download using just your browser.
While resizing in our tool isn't supported, you can resize screenshots in Linux using terminal utilities before uploading them for annotation.
No, the tool processes one file at a time. Complete your editing, download, and start again to annotate another image.
No, our tool is designed for use on desktop browsers only, including those on Linux systems like Ubuntu.
After capturing your screenshot, upload it to the tool. Use the highlight function to emphasize important areas directly in your browser.
No, the tool allows you to overlay annotations but doesn't edit the original text in screenshots. You can add text comments as annotations.
Yes, the tool supports file uploads with a maximum size of 100 MB for each image being annotated.