

As an example, I set one to PrintScreen and the other to Shift+PrintScreen so they're close to the hotkey you're currently used to. You also need to do a little configuration for the scrolling capture in PicPick to work perfectly. If you’re looking for a tool to record your screen and create videos, PicPick isn’t the right tool for you. This would require you to work with 2 hotkey shortcuts. However, one big drawback is that the tool does not support video capture. This will ensure that the differing cursor settings you want are supported. I named and gave each a custom hotkey, which you can set to whatever you want. Then I went to the Video tab, adjusted my settings so that Capture Cursor was On, and saved it as another Preset. As an example for your workflow, I set up the Image tab with Capture Cursor Off, then created a Preset with those settings here: > There are some low-cost programs that work quite well. Presets allow you to save certain settings and give each a unique hotkey. CamStudio is FreeWare, although it gives me problems with audio capture. So because you're starting from the All-in-One tab, whatever setting you have for Capture Cursor will apply to any captures you take from there, whether it's an image or a video. Your Image tab settings will only affect captures that are started from the Image tab and so on and so forth. Unfortunately for your workflow, each tab is currently independent.
