![]() Is that too much to ask from a big company like Microsoft?Īgain, a nice well written tutorial, I assume you don’t work for Microsoft as it was explained so clearly. This old lady don’t need to play video games, all I need is an OS that can function well on the internet and cut, copy, and paste photos. I visited my nephew last month and found that not only does Ubuntu do this without question anyone (even someone as slow as me) can set up keyboard shortcuts. This is a regression, it wasn't present in Windows 10. It should cover the entire area but it isn't. The greyed area is the snipping tool area where I can drag the mouse. The left screen has 150 zoom ratio while the right one has 100. This old dog grows tired of learning new tricks. Here's your screenshot: this was taken with bare F12 after launching the snipping tool. I have spoken to my nephew about setting me up with his OS. You and about a half dozen other tutorials in the last 30 minutes, have proven to me, that one needs to download an external 3rd party program just to replace the Windows apps… making Windows all that much bigger than needed. Their default applications just suck so badly that some smart computer scientist (such as yourself) needs to tell grandma here how to do a simple PRNT SCRN she has done 1,000 times in the past. I went from Windows 7 to 10 and it has been one thing after another. Right click any column header on the processes tab and turn on the Command line column, expand the Snipping tool process and you will see the full path to the app in the Command line column. Thanks for the tutorial, but this is why Windows (ever since Windows 10) hasn’t appealed to me. To see the exact path to the snipping tool, open that app, then open Task Manager and select the Processes tab.
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