

You may select the drawing tools that you want displayed when you invoke the toolbar. The options of the open source software provide additional settings. Another useful feature is that glnk supports multi-display devices as well. Pen users may notice that it can distinguish between different pen pressures.

The application supports mouse, pen, and touch input. A click on the camera icon creates a snapshot of the screen. The arrow icon does not paint arrows on the screen but is used to activate mouse functionality (to activate links or buttons). Several pencils are provided to draw on the screen there is also an eraser, an undo function, and a trashbin to destroy everything that has been annotated up to that point. Use hotkeys, the mouse or touch-input to select one of the available tools to start using it. The toolbar is displayed at the bottom and most on-screen activity is blocked at the same time.

You may launch it either with a left-click on the system tray icon or use the global hotkey Ctrl-Alt-G instead. The on-screen annotation software sits idly in the background on start. Those interested in the source code find it hosted there as well.Īll it takes is to download the latest version of the software, extract the archive it comes in, and run the executable from the destination directory. Windows users may download the latest version of the program from the project's GitHub website.
