Nicke Manarin is a solo Brazilian developer whose public footprint revolves almost entirely around ScreenToGif, a lightweight Windows utility that records displays, webcams or sketch-board sessions and immediately opens the captured frames in a built-in editor. The program targets educators writing quick tutorials, support staff documenting bugs, forum posters illustrating software quirks, designers prototyping micro-animations, and gamers clipping memorable moments. Because the interface is little more than a resizable frame with big red record and stop buttons, non-technical users can start capturing within seconds, yet the same executable hides a surprisingly deep timeline: each frame can be cropped, captioned, water-marked, pixelated or replaced; transitions, key-strokes and mouse clicks can be overlaid; colour tables can be reduced for smaller GIFs; and the finished clip can be exported as animated GIF, APNG, video, PSD strip or image sequence. Batch operations—resize, optimize, fade or adjust frame delay—let power-users polish entire folders overnight, while the separate “Board” mode turns a blank canvas into a white-board recorder ideal for quick math lessons or UI wire-frames. Portable, open-source and translated into more than twenty languages, the tool has become a staple recommendation on Reddit and Microsoft forums whenever someone asks for “something simpler than OBS but more flexible than the Snipping Tool.” Nicke Manarin’s ScreenToGif is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetch the latest release, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.

ScreenToGif

Screen, webcam and sketchboard recorder with an integrated editor.

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