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(If you want to create a Desktop shortcut just drag it onto the Desktop and create a link for it there.) During the writing of this article The Shutter developers have updated quite a lot of stuff and versions are now available for Jaunty Jackalope too. Whichever route you go down Shutter will now be in your menu under Accessories.
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Just click on the download link and choose to open it with Getdeb and it will do the rest, including pulling down any dependencies you might need. If you prefer a stand-alone Debian binary the ever dependable Getdeb has 32 and 64-bit versions but only for Intrepid Ibex. Dependencies, if any, will be taken care of automatically by the package manager.
#Flickr uploadr 64 bit install
Installing it is as easy as apt-get install shutter as root in a console. The main advantage of using this method is that not only is it easy but it will also ensure that you will always have the most up to date version of Shutter. Shutter is not Ubuntu-centric but the developers have made it available via a PPA in the repositories for all versions of Ubuntu from 7.10 (Gusty Gibbon) to 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope) via a link to Launchpad and installation is simply a matter of running Synaptic as root and adding the relevant repository by copying and pasting the link for your version and updating the repositories.
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Yes, you can use it as a one shot (!) screenshot utility and e-mail the results to your friends, just as you would do with Ksnapshot in KDE or screenshot for Gnome but Shutter is a fully-fledged programme with all the bells and whistles which can do so much more. It is feature rich all right and the word "utility" is nowhere to be found. The official website describes it as " a feature-rich screenshot program". By the end of this article I hope you will agree that calling Shutter a mere screenshot utility is like calling the QE2 a rowing boat. A Citroen 2CV is still a minger even with a rampant Ferrari horse on the bonnet but with that rebadging the developers of Shutter do not flatter to deceive.
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Giving your software a good name however will not guarantee that it's any damn good. At last, a name that reflected what it might actually do and you could mention it in front of your maiden Aunt too. Finally, in their wisdom, Gscrot became Shutter and the developers saw that it was good. I could never quite say it without imagining that it killed most of my ancestors in the great Scrot plague of 1392 by attacking parts of their anatomy that cannot be mentioned in polite society. And Scrot begot Gscrot (GtkScreenShot), a point and click GUI for that command line and still the word was not good. Scrot was not one of those insufferably recursive acronyms beloved of GNU/Linux propeller heads. In the beginning was Scrot and the word was not good. I could never quite say it without imagining that it killed most of my ancestors in the great Scrot plague of 1392 I think Shutter may well be the solution. Not really entirely convenient when you just want to concentrate on writing the definitive user guide for some piece of killer software. It's immensely powerful and configurable but it does take some setting up. Back in the mists of time I looked at a command-line utility called Scrot.
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In short, I like to illustrate my text with timely and relevant screenshots so I'm always on the lookout for good, free software to get the job done.
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Like anyone else who writes about software I subscribe to the maxim that a picture paints a thousand words.
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