Take Five For Mac



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How to take a screenshot on your Mac

  1. To take a screenshot, press and hold these three keys together: Shift, Command, and 3.
  2. If you see a thumbnail in the corner of your screen, click it to edit the screenshot. Or wait for the screenshot to save to your desktop.
  1. Download Take-5 (Mac OSX) free. Take-5 lets you easily enhance your digital images.No dials, no difficult controls.Just.
  2. Take Five is available on the Mac App Store and, for a limited time, costs just $2—half of its official $4 price tag. It requires Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later. And, as a reminder.
  3. Take5 is a stop motion and penciltest program for beginners and pros alike. Originally developed as a penciltest program, Take5 has evolved into a high quality animation capture and editing tool.

How to capture a portion of the screen

  1. Press and hold these three keys together: Shift, Command, and 4.
  2. Drag the crosshair to select the area of the screen to capture. To move the selection, press and hold Space bar while dragging. To cancel taking the screenshot, press the Esc (Escape) key.
  3. To take the screenshot, release your mouse or trackpad button.
  4. If you see a thumbnail in the corner of your screen, click it to edit the screenshot. Or wait for the screenshot to save to your desktop.

How to capture a window or menu

  1. Open the window or menu that you want to capture.
  2. Press and hold these keys together: Shift, Command, 4, and Space bar. The pointer changes to a camera icon . To cancel taking the screenshot, press the Esc (Escape) key.
  3. Click the window or menu to capture it. To exclude the window's shadow from the screenshot, press and hold the Option key while you click.
  4. If you see a thumbnail in the corner of your screen, click it to edit the screenshot. Or wait for the screenshot to save to your desktop.
Take Five For Mac

Where to find screenshots

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By default, screenshots save to your desktop with the name ”Screen Shot [date] at [time].png.”

In macOS Mojave or later, you can change the default location of saved screenshots from the Options menu in the Screenshot app. You can also drag the thumbnail to a folder or document.

Learn more

  • In macOS Mojave or later, you can also set a timer and choose where screenshots are saved with the Screenshot app. To open the app, press and hold these three keys together: Shift, Command, and 5. Learn more about the Screenshot app.
  • Some apps, such as the Apple TV app, might not let you take screenshots of their windows.
  • To copy a screenshot to the Clipboard, press and hold the Control key while you take the screenshot. You can then paste the screenshot somewhere else. Or use Universal Clipboard to paste it on another Apple device.

Welcome to “Take Five,” a new column where we sit down with WKU faculty and staff members to learn about five things they love.

If you ask someone in the School of Journalism & Broadcasting about Mac McKerral’s classes, you won’t hear the term “easy A.” McKerral, known affectionately by his students simply as Mac, is not the type of professor who lets you slide by.

Take five for kids

In fact, every semester he asks his News Writing students to fill out a survey about themselves and their expectations for the course. One question asks what rumors the students have heard about McKerral.

“He’s a cranky, old man but he knows what he’s talking about,” his favorite answer read.

McKerral might have a cranky facade and reputation, but we wanted to know the real him, so we sat down and asked him to tell us five of his favorite things. Get to know our beloved Mac McKerral through his answers.

1. “Something” by The Beatles

With approximately 300 vinyl records and over 6,000 songs in his iTunes library, McKerral said he couldn’t possibly choose his favorite album.

“I have everything The Beatles have released, everything Van Morrison has ever released, everything Tom Petty has released, everything Jackson Browne has ever released,” McKerral said. “Picking a favorite album would be hard, but I could pick one song.”

The song? “Something” by The Beatles.

“Frank Sinatra said it was the greatest love song ever written, and Frank Sinatra knows his stuff,” he said.

Take Five For Mac
2. Scottish heritage

Although the journalism professor grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, he’s always felt strong ties to his Scottish and Irish heritage.

“My grandfather came to the United States from Glasgow in 1924,” he said. “When I taught in Harlaxton, I went to Edinburgh, Scotland for five days, and I just had this feeling that I belonged there.”

3. Grave digging?
Take Five For Mac

He’s been a professor for around 29 years, 13 of which have been at WKU. Although the majority of his professional life has been spent in a classroom and newsrooms, he’s also had his fair share of generally undesirable jobs.

“You know, I really enjoyed my job as a gravedigger — it was OK,” he said. “I’m sure you know cemeteries are very peaceful.”

4. Not “Star Wars”

He’s never seen it — and he said he never will.

He tried once.

Take Five For Murder Peter Gunn

“I was asleep within three minutes,” he said.

In fact, he’s written off the entire science fiction genre. It’s just not his thing.
5. Vacations
Mac said he likes to go on vacations, often with old friends from high school or his undergraduate program in Phoenix.

“I spend a week fishing somewhere in the summer,” he said. “The last couple of years we’ve been going to Minnesota.”

McKerral also has a love for horse racing. He worked at a racetrack at one point in his life and frequently watches thoroughbred racing.

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“I’ve been to the Kentucky Derby every year since 1970,” McKerral said.

Take Five For Kids

Stay tuned for our next edition of “Take Five.” Is there a professor you’d like WKU to get to know better? Leave a comment below or email us at wkutalisman@gmail.com.