Take High Resolution Screenshot Of Any Tweet Using Its URL

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Donnell Simon

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May 2, 2024, 6:39:03 PM5/2/24
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Screenshot Guru, available at screenshot.guru, lets you screen-capture beautiful and high-resolution screenshot images of any web page on the Internet. You can screenshot tweets, news articles, photo galleries and everything that's public online.

Take High Resolution screenshot of any tweet using its URL


Download 🔗 https://t.co/q8NnGEFnhE



I want to put a (non-image) portion of my website on a t-shirt, and to do so I need a high-resolution image of the relevant part. My thought is to tell some utility "take a screenshot of this webpage at such and such resolution" and then cut out the part that I want.

Screenshot Guru is a free online service or more precisely say a Twitter bot that lets you take high resolution screenshot of any tweet using its URL. It creates the screenshot of the target tweet and then you can save the image. It not only offers a web version but a Chrome extension too to do the same. And in the following post, I will explain about both of them. To take the screenshot of a tweet, you can either use its URL or you can use the capture button that it adds in the tweet through the Chrome extension.

There are plenty of screen capture software that you can use. But then problem is that if you want to use them for capturing tweets, you will have to first adjust the frame and then do some editing on it. But you can stop wasting time in all that by simply using Screenshot Guru. You just have to submit the URL of the tweet to it and then it will return the image of that tweet that you can save on your PC. However, to take the screenshot, it takes a few seconds to process the target tweet as an image.


(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle []).push(); How to Take High Resolution screenshot of any tweet using its URL?Screenshot Guru not only lets you take the screenshot of tweets, you can use it to take screenshots of any website. To take the screenshot, you just have to submit the URL of the website. And when you take the screenshot of a tweet having a video in it, then it adds the thumbnail of the video in the screenshot as well.

Apart from using the online version of Screenshot Guru, you can use its Chrome extension as well. The Chrome extension makes it very easy to take the screenshot of tweet. It adds a camera icon at the bottom of a tweet. You can hit that button and it will show you the screenshot. You can then save that screenshot on your PC or do whatever you want.

So, that is how Screenshot Guru works to get you high resolution screenshots of any Tweet. It depends on you what method you want to use. You can either use the Chrome extension to take screenshots of tweets or if you are comfortable with the web version, then you can go with that.

If you still use the traditional approaches to take screenshots of tweets, then switch to Screenshot Guru. In a few seconds, you can get high resolution screenshot of any tweet. Also, if you use Chrome browser very often, then in just one click, you can get screenshot of any tweet using Screenshot Guru Plugin..

I am making a cheat sheet with a bunch of equations and notes on them. I essentially take screenshots of the notes on my computer, and then paste them to a word document, and then resize them to make them smaller so I can fit more. I can visibly see the notes on my word document (even when at same size and zoom as a standard piece of paper), but when I print it out everything becomes blurry.

What's a good way to remedy this situation? I tried saving as PDF, then printing as an image because supposedly that would be higher quality but this doesn't work. Is this because of the printer or the resolution of the photo itself? I suspect it may be the printer is not able to print in such high resolution as well. Thanks.

Twitter Screenshots Apps allow users to capture screenshots of their timelines or specific tweets. These apps are handy for creating content for blogs, articles, newsletters, and other social media platforms.

Urlbox is a screenshot API at its core, but it also comes with Sandbox - a virtual playground. You can use this to generate a screenshot automatically and download it in many different formats, like PNG, JPEG, and even SVG or PDF. Urlbox is consider the most accurate way to convert HTML to image and it works great on tweets.

You can screenshot single tweets straight from your phone, edit and save them in your gallery. Tweetshot comes with three different layouts you can pick from; it lets you edit the background color of the final image and change the Twitter theme (light or dark).

Capture high-resolution and beautiful screenshots of tweets with one click. Screenshots Guru adds a little camera icon to every tweet on the Twitter website for you to instantly screen capture the tweet and download as a retina PNG image.Unlike most other screen capture tools, Screenshot Guru cleans the tweet of any distracting elements and what you get is a beautiful frame-worthy screenshot of the tweet.Internally, it fetches the Tweet HTML using the oEmbed protocol, renders the tweet inside Headless Chrome, coverts the web page into a PNG Screenshot with Puppeteer running on the Google Cloud platform. Everything is automated and none of your data ever gets recorded or saved anywhere.The APA Style recommends including the Tweet URL (or permalink) and only the date (and not the time) of the tweet in the citation.

Whenever I take screenshots using the default screenshot tool on my Ubuntu 11.10 (unity), the image does not look as good as the screen itself (the quality is deteriorated). So I would like to take high quality screenshots. Is there any tool for this?
[The resolution of the image is the same as that of my screen, but surprisingly, it does not look as good as the original one.]

The default tool gnome-screenshot does take sharp images but if you open them in the default Image Viewer and knock the mouse scrollwheel (or the Best Fit option is in effect) then the quality degrades significantly. In Image Viewer press Ctrl+0 (zero) to revert to Normal view (100% scale).

Shutter is still heavier than Flameshot. Personally speaking, a screenshot is purely a screenshot, all I want is firstly selecting a range, freely adjusting it if I am not satisfied, adding some texts, or drawing important marks, then I can decide whether I want to copy it to clipboard or save it into file, that's it. I do not like extra pop-up a new window to let me do editions. I can do it using other type of tools.

OK, I read all your posts and tried a number of experiments with GIMP, Shutter, and Flameshot. None of them got me to a satisfactory level because I needed really high-quality screenshots. So, the best comment above about the quality of the screen git me thinking, and eventually I did the following:

It seems the built-in screenshot utility (by pressing Shift+PrtScr ) overly compresses the snapshot when its width goes beyond some extent or the H/W ratio is too high, causing the captured screen texts blurry. You can decrease the H/W ratio by including more area or reduce its width to see the difference.

Introducing Screenshot Guru, a new Twitter bot that will help you easily take high-resolution screenshots of tweets. There are a plethora of screen capture apps available, including the good old Print+Screen combo but with Screenshot Guru, you get crisp and beautiful screenshots sans the clutter.

Screenshot Guru offers 3 different options for screen capturing tweets. You have a web app for desktops, a Google Chrome extension and a Twitter bot @screenshotguru for people who are looking for a way to easily screenshot tweets on their Android or iPhone.

3. Twitter Bot - Screenshot Guru is available as a Twitter bot that works both on the Twitter website and mobile apps. You can DM tweets to the @screenshotguru bot and it will send a screenshot image back to you in a private DM.

I have been trying to take a high resolution screenshot of an HTML5 canvas element that I have for a visualization consisting of rectangles and circles. The canvas.toDataURL() works great, except that the image produced is limited to the size of the original canvas. What I would really like is to take a screenshot that is 4 or 5 times that of the original canvas.

I'm writing a book and sometimes I must show some screenshots taken from my terminal window. Problem is they are not good for print, so I need to increase their quality (resolution). Is there any way to take screenshots at a higher resolution? At the moment, I'm using Ubuntu (is there any way to simulate HIdpi and take the screenshot?).

The best way to get print-quality output from what is actually text is to actually represent it as text, rather than as a picture. If you take an actual screenshot of the terminal emulator window, then by definition of a screenshot, you'll get a screen-resolution bitmap.

I need to capture an area within my desktop. But I need this area to be very high resolution (like, at least few thousand's pixels horizontal, same goes for vertical). Is it possible to get a screen capture that has high density of pixels? How can I do this? I tried capturing the screen with some AutoIt script, and got some very good results (images that were 350MB big), now I would like to do the same using C#.

Screenshots on Retina displays get resized down 2x while keeping the same resolution when you insert them into Figma. 100px screenshot becomes 50px object in Figma. Exporting such a screenshot at 1x would result in decreasing the original resolution by 2x. Did you account for that?

Using in-feed images (or images that appear within a tweet) can be an effective way to increase engagement and get more eyes on your content. Images should be high-quality, visually appealing, and relevant to your message for optimal reach.

Images are now an essential part of communication. Taking a bulk screenshot is the quickest method to share information, whether it is a funny bug, a charming Facebook picture, or a tweet that was swiftly removed from others. A screenshot is the simplest method for saving whatever is seen on your screen. And, screenshots are so common nowadays that almost all OSes have their specific tool for taking screenshots.

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