GrabUp: ScreenShot sharing made easy
There are a million reasons why I find Mac OS X better than the other OS around ( Yes, I said better. NOT best. ) One of them, is GrabUp.
GrabUp is a preference pane for your Mac OS X that makes it extremely easy to share screenshots with other people quickly. All it takes is 3 keys. Let me elaborate a little about this nifty little utility. I’m pretty sure, I’ll find this installed on your Macs, if you haven’t already by now.
Installation:
The 567kb file can be downloaded from the site and once installed, it can be accessed as a preference pane from the System Preferences.
Usage:
Apple and Mac OS have already made it easy to take screen shots of your desktop or the apps that you have running.
1) Command + Shift + 3 ( ⌘ Shift 3 ) - This takes a screenshot of the entire screen and saves the file to the desktop.
2) Command + Shift + 4 ( ⌘ Shift 4 ) - This will give you a crosshair, using which you can select the area you want to take a screenshot of.
3) Command + Shift + 4 + Spacebar - After hitting a spacebar after the above, you can click the mouse to take the screenshot of only the window or app that is in focus. Similar to Alt + PrintScreen in windows.
All the 3 methods above, save the screenshot taken as a file on the desktop.
But what happens when you have to share the screenshots with a friend or colleague ? Your options would be to email them, drag the screenshot to an IM window or as most other users, upload the images to an image hosting site.
Here’s where GrabUp comes into the picture. GrabUp automatically uploads the images to their server and returns the URL by copying it to clipboard. That leaves you to just paste it wherever you want to. Fantastic, isn’t it ?
But, is that all it does ? No. There’s more to it.
What’s more?
GrabUp stores the URLs of your last 10 screenshots and links them to the URLs. This is presented to you with the exact date and time at which it was taken, accessible from the menu bar.

Clicking on it opens up the image in your default browser. There is an option to clear the list of recent items too.
The URL returned changes the filename to a randomly generated string, so it is almost impossible to guess the images uploaded to the server. An example of the link would be /uploads/799366f2e6b804dcee28de284e431015.png
Limitations/Disadvantages?
The developers have tried to keep it as simple as possible. So there are no options to configure at all, except the option to start at login and show in menu bar. However, I would really like to have one option in the preference pane. There are times where I don’t want the screenshot to be uploaded to the server. At such moments, I have to quit GrabUp, take the screenshot and then then relaunch it again. Instead, there can be a hot key setting that would somehow not upload the screenshot to their servers.
Secondly, I don’t know if this has been left out on purpose, but some kind of user login system would be helpful to retrieve old screenshots.
At the time of publishing this article, GrabUp has had 4180 downloads and 24,406 grabs have been uploaded to their servers.

A 21-year-old Blogger, Webmaster, Content-manager, Apple-lover, Mac-user, iPod-listener, Twitter-boy, IT student who loves travelling, photography and adventure sports.







GrabUp seems quite interesting. I have been using Skitch for such purposes. Thanks for the tip.
I still find Skitch to be a much better option than GrabUp. Has a lot more going on in there. And at least for now, the service is free. Although, I wouldn’t mind spending $20 a year or so for the excellent image hosting by Media Temple.
Skitch still rules. It’s prefect for blogs and small-small image editing jobs.
Heyy Preshit, this is my first time on your blog and boy its awesome!!
I’ve used GrabUp and Skitch and the problem with GrabUp is same as you’ve mentioned, there should have been a hot or screenshots shouldn’t always get uploaded to server. But then again, its cool and next only to Skitch :-)