These extra features aren't particularly well-advertised nor easy to access, so you'll be forgiven if you've never come across them before. Open it via the Win+Shift+S keyboard shortcut or through the Start menu, and check out what it can do.
To try it, open an image in Snipping Tool, click the three dots in the top right corner, then choose Visual Search with Bing. You'll be directed to Microsoft's search engine in your default browser, and from there you can click through on any result to see more.
Extract text from images
Extracting text from an image. Credit: LifehackerFrom there you can copy some or all of the text to the Windows clipboard and other programs—very handy if you need to pull text out of receipts or documents, for example. Click Quick redact to ignore any text containing email addresses and phone numbers.
The process is the same as it is for text extraction: Open the image in the Snipping Tool, then click Text actions (the button with horizontal lines in a frame), and as long as the image you're dealing with has a QR code inside it, you'll see a clickable link appear on top.
Record video and audio
Switch to movie mode to record clips. Credit: LifehackerYou have the option of recording the entirety of the screen, or just a particular section of it (by dragging the edges of the selection window). When the recording is in progress, a control bar appears at the top with options for including system and microphone audio.
Editing images to add annotations or emoji
With an image open inside the Snipping Tool, you'll see four buttons on the top toolbar: the pen, the highlighter, the eraser, and the shapes tool (which also lets you drop in emojis). Click once to select a tool, then click the button again to bring up its options.
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