Sujet : Re: Telestrator software
De : blockedofcourse (at) *nospam* foo.invalid (Don Y)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 01. Mar 2025, 21:09:39
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vpvpi0$c8s4$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; Win64; x64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/102.2.2
On 3/1/2025 3:50 AM, Tom Del Rosso wrote:
Don Y wrote:
Do you want to leave your markings on the screen, regardless of
how the intended content changes "under" it?
That might be useful sometimes, but I'm thinking of the way a
telestrator works, where the lines disappear as soon as you finish
looking at them.
So, is your intent to use this as a *presentation* tool?
I.e., where your audience makes mental note of your markups
before you move on to the next issue?
I could see value in that. I use an "electric whiteboard" for
my presentations: a "background image" with "magic markers"
that let me draw (4 colors) on top of it and an "eraser" to
adjust my markups.
But, the underlying image is completely static. E.g., a schematic,
petri net, mechanical assembly, etc.
The "live" approach (yours?) would be more versatile as you could
interact with the "background" without having to treat it as a
slide projector.
So, press a hotkey to activate the utility, make annotations, press a
key to clear it and restore normal mouse function. That would be good
enough. There are some programs with descriptions that sound almost
right but it turns out they don't do this.
I think W10 has a built-in facility to do something similar
(I don't run W10 so can't give testimony).
Under X Windows, it would be relatively easy to create such a
tool: overlay a transparent window on the screen, capture
keystrokes/mouse movements to scribble on it, etc. I.e., let
the window system handle all of the heavy lifting.
I'd be curious to hear of anything you find (as well as your
intended use)!