I do not have an iPad so I do not use the skitch app. That just might have to be on my wish list for next school year. Lots of possibilities I can see for making documentation come alive. You might guess, though, that I am enamored with your examples.
This may sound funny, but I do not know what I use. I can tell you what I do. I transfer the pictures I want to use in my post onto my desktop. I have a Mac. When I click on the picture, I get a toolbar at the top of the picture. I click on the pencil icon and that allows me to annotate the picture. It is fairly rudimentary so the app you used seems to have more options and flexibility.
Aha! I have that facility too. Skitch is definitely less fiddly but offers less choice in terms of font, colours, etc. So in many ways it's a little quicker to use and certainly simpler for children.
4 comments:
I do not have an iPad so I do not use the skitch app. That just might have to be on my wish list for next school year. Lots of possibilities I can see for making documentation come alive. You might guess, though, that I am enamored with your examples.
Hi Tom
I think this is really funny as you are so good at annotating the photos on your blog! You will have to let me know what you use.
Best wishes
Juliet
Hi Juliet,
This may sound funny, but I do not know what I use. I can tell you what I do. I transfer the pictures I want to use in my post onto my desktop. I have a Mac. When I click on the picture, I get a toolbar at the top of the picture. I click on the pencil icon and that allows me to annotate the picture. It is fairly rudimentary so the app you used seems to have more options and flexibility.
All the best
Tom
Aha! I have that facility too. Skitch is definitely less fiddly but offers less choice in terms of font, colours, etc. So in many ways it's a little quicker to use and certainly simpler for children.
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