Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
upScreen is a lightweight screenshot tool focused on helping users capture and share screenshots quickly. It supports region screenshots, window screenshots, and clipboard screenshots, and can also capture content from copied images, image URLs, or image files. After a screenshot is taken, the tool instantly uploads the image to the user’s own server via FTP/SFTP and returns a shareable link.
In terms of functionality, upScreen is more of a screenshot upload workflow tool for developers, technical support teams, and heavy desktop users than a complex image editor. It emphasizes being “simple and straight-forward”: once the screenshot, upload, and link-generation flow is complete, it tries to stay out of the user’s way. Compared with tools that rely on third-party image hosts, its key advantage is “Full control of your data”: images are stored on your own server, making it suitable for users who care about data ownership, access control, or long-term retention.
The main page explicitly provides downloads for Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10, with no mention of macOS, Linux, or mobile platforms. For integrations, it is known to support FTP and SFTP, allowing it to work with a user’s self-managed server or hosting space that supports these protocols. Strictly speaking, it is not a full self-hosted application; rather, it hands image upload and storage over to the user’s own server, which still gives users strong control over their data. The page does not disclose any API, SDK, plugin ecosystem, or integrations with team collaboration tools.
The captured content does not provide information about pricing, licensing, whether it is free, or whether it is open source, so its business model and long-term cost are unclear. As for documentation, the current page only shows feature highlights and download links; there are no visible instructions for configuring FTP/SFTP, link generation rules, security recommendations, or troubleshooting. For a tool that requires server configuration, the lack of documentation may make onboarding harder for beginners.
Its strengths are a short workflow, support for multiple screenshot sources, automatic upload with shareable link generation, and storage on your own server. Its drawbacks include limited platform information, no visible mention of advanced annotation, history management, permission control, or other related features, and a lack of pricing and maintenance-status details. It is best suited to Windows users who already have an FTP/SFTP server and want control over their screenshot data. If you need out-of-the-box cloud screenshot management or team collaboration, alternatives such as ShareX, Greenshot, Snipaste, or PicGo may be worth considering.
The page does not provide information about website accessibility in mainland China, download speed, or payment methods, so its China access status is unknown. Since it relies on the user’s own server for uploads, the actual sharing experience will also depend on the network connectivity of that server within China.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on getupscreen.com official site.
getupscreen.com is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach getupscreen.com directly.