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What tools do you use to annotate images?

I mean, for example, placing a screenshot into documentation with some text bubbles, arrows, numbers for references in text and so on.

Sure, you can do all of these in general graphics editor, but a specialized tool (or plugin for a generic editor) would be so much nicer and should produce more consistent results.

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The best program I have come across is Screenshot Studio. It is commercial software though and only available for Windows.

As mentioned in the comments, there is a free version called Fireshot. It is limited to grabbing web pages. The feature set matches up fairly equitably with Screenshot Studio, so should be a viable option for doing web app documentation.

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Btw, their free FireShot plugin for Firefox/IE does the job too. – Alan Mendelevich Sep 20 '08 at 8:59
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I think SnagIt is the best tool. It's a commercial tool, but it supports the whole life cycle in terms of taking screenshots and then annotating them.

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I second SnagIt. For something less "everything and the kitchen sink", I use Jing. For Apple Mac, there's Skitch.

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I use Adobe Illustrator, OpenOffice Draw or Microsoft Word, depending on the situation and operating system. It's easy to cut-and-paste a screenshot directly into any of these programs.

They offer plenty of flexibility, and they are popular enough that most of the people I know already use at least one of them. Which means I can share the native file formats and don't need to worry about exporting to PDF or JPEG/PNG images first (I might want to change those annotations later).

It's also nice to be annotating using vector graphics, since this makes it easier to edit/scale shapes, arrows, etc. without losing quality.

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These applications are too slow for me in this situation. The feature set I found best is: a) starts fast b) allows to take screenshot in 1 click or button press c) immediately offers text, boxes, arrows for annotation. – chryss Sep 20 '08 at 10:14

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