The pitch for Amazon’s new warehouse robot is that you talk to it. At its “Delivering the Future” event at the Dartford fulfilment centre east of London on 4 June, Amazon unveiled a next-generation Proteus that takes instructions in plain language, no technical commands and no programming interface, alongside a plan to invest more than €10bn (about $11.6bn) in its European fulfilment network over the coming years.
The interface is the headline change. “You tell it what needs to be done. It figures out the priority, the route, the timing,” said Scott Dresser, vice president of Amazon Robotics, describing the robot as an assistant for material movement.
Where the current Proteus, deployed at 25 US sites, works only in dock areas moving carts that can weigh close to 400kg, the new version is designed to operate anywhere across a fulfilment or delivery site, transporting containers as they arrive and ferrying them between workstations.
It is not shipping yet. The next-generation Proteus is being piloted in Amazon’s labs, with European deployment planned for the first half of 2027.
That timeline puts it alongside two other systems Amazon is expanding across the region: STARK, a collaborative tote-handling robot first piloted in Barcelona and set to reach 15 European sites by 2027, and Vulcan, the company’s first robot with a sense of touch, which has moved from Spokane, Washington to its Hamburg facility in Germany.
The money is the larger commitment. Amazon framed the robotics as one piece of a plan to invest more than €10bn modernising European fulfilment, and said it would grow its European fulfilment-centre workforce by 25,000 in the coming years.
That headcount figure is the company’s answer, stated upfront, to the obvious question about automation and jobs, paired with its claim that robotics has created new categories of work in reliability, maintenance, and engineering.
The robots came bundled with a delivery-speed push. Amazon said it will open more than 25 sub-same-day delivery sites across Europe this year, including in Britain and Germany, and expand Amazon Now, its ultra-fast essentials service, to Manchester and Birmingham.
Same-day fresh-grocery delivery, it said, now reaches more than 2,300 US cities and parts of Tokyo, with further expansion planned. Its next-generation assistant, Alexa+, is due to launch in 10 more countries in 2027.
The spending sits inside a much larger one. In February, Amazon forecast a more than 50% jump in capital expenditure to $200bn this year, joining its peers in an infrastructure build-out driven by AI.
Against that, €10bn for European fulfilment is a regional line item rather than the headline, but it is the part with a face on it: a robot that, by 2027, an Amazon worker in Dartford or Hamburg is meant to be able to instruct simply by telling it what to do. Whether it works as smoothly on a live warehouse floor as it does in a lab is the thing the 2027 rollout will actually test.
macOS has a built-in screenshot tool that gets the basics right. You can take a screenshot, record your screen, and even annotate your captures. But the moment you want something more, like scrolling capture, advanced annotation tools, or a quick way to share your screenshots via a link, it starts to fall apart.
That’s where CleanShot X comes in. It’s a powerful screenshot and screen recording app for Mac that replaces the built-in screenshot tool. It feels as if the developers looked at the screenshot features in macOS and added everything that was missing.
Over the past few years, the app has added several new features I didn’t know I needed until it offered them. It has become one of my favorite Mac utilities, and in this article, I will show you its features that will convince you to buy the app instantly.
Scrolling capture saves you from stitching screenshots together
One of the most frustrating limitations of macOS’s screenshot tool is that it can only capture what’s visible on your screen. If I need to capture a long webpage or a full chat history, I am stuck taking multiple screenshots and stitching them together. That wastes an unbelievable amount of time.
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CleanShot X solves this with its scrolling capture feature. I can trigger the scrolling capture, and CleanShot X automatically scrolls through the content and delivers a single image. I don’t even have to manually scroll the page if I don’t want to.
This feature alone saves me hours of time every month. If you have to deal with long screenshots, you should definitely try it out.
Time delay capture lets you screenshot the impossible
Some screenshots are tricky to take because they require you to trigger something before capturing. For example, sometimes the on-screen feature you want to capture disappears as soon as you use a keyboard shortcut or click anywhere with your mouse.
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Sometimes, the on-screen elements appear for a short time, and by the time you hit the screenshot shortcut, they disappear. CleanShot X’s time delay capture gives me a few seconds to set things up before the screenshot is taken. I trigger the capture, put everything in place, and CleanShot X does the rest.
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It’s a small feature that solves a genuinely annoying problem.
Capture text from images with OCR
I love that CleanShot X has a built-in OCR function. It lets me capture text directly from any image or video on my screen. Although it happens rarely, I have come across websites that don’t let me copy content. With CleanShot X’s OCR function, that’s not an issue.
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I use this constantly when reviewing PDF documents with restricted permissions or watching a video on YouTube. It is far faster than typing things out manually, and it works surprisingly well. There are many apps that let you capture text with OCR, but since CleanShot X has this feature built in, I don’t need to install an extra app.
Add beautiful backgrounds to your screenshots
If you share screenshots for work, tutorials, or social media, you know how plain a raw screenshot looks. CleanShot X lets me add beautiful backgrounds to my screenshots, turning a flat capture into something that looks polished and share-ready.
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For backgrounds, I can choose from solid colors, gradients, or even my current desktop wallpaper. I can also adjust the padding and shadow, align the screenshot to the edges, and adjust the corner radius. It takes a few seconds and makes a huge difference in how professional your screenshots look.
Annotation tools that get the job done
While macOS’s screenshot tool lets you annotate your screenshots, the annotation tools inside CleanShot X are, in my opinion, the best available on the Mac.
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I can add arrows, text labels, shapes, highlights, and more. I can also change the weight and color of annotations. There are also multiple arrow styles I can choose from. I especially like the curved arrow style that lets me curve the arrows and make them pop.
One of my favorite new additions is the “Highlighter” tool. It snaps to the text in a screenshot, which makes it really easy to highlight it before sharing.
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends
Then there’s the “Spotlight” tool that highlights your selection by darkening the rest of the screenshot. It’s perfect for drawing someone’s attention to a specific part of a screenshot.
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No matter what annotation tools you need, you can find them and more in CleanShot X.
Hide sensitive information before you share
You can find hundreds of instances in the news where a prominent figure shared a screenshot and inadvertently revealed private information. Thankfully, CleanShot X has a dedicated tool to blur or black out sensitive information, so such accidents never happen.
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I can choose to pixelate, blur, or completely black out the information. The best part is that I can also adjust the strength of these effects. It lets me blend in the hidden information so the blur doesn’t stand out from the rest of the screenshot.
Video and GIF recording built right in
CleanShot X also lets you record your screen as a video or export directly as an optimized GIF. The GIF export is particularly useful for sharing quick demos or showing someone how to do something without creating a large video file.
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends
It can record the entire screen, a specific window, or a custom region. It can also show my mouse clicks and keyboard shortcuts. I can record my computer audio, my microphone, and webcam video.
I love that it automatically adds the webcam video in the corner, so it doesn’t interfere with the rest of the recording. I can also change the video size and shape. All these features make it really easy to create video tutorials.
Quick share with cloud links
Once you take a screenshot or finish a recording, you need to share it. Of course, you can easily share screenshots via messages or emails. But CleanShot X gives me a better way.
Whenever I capture something, it opens a quick share overlay. I can use it to instantly upload my screenshots to CleanShot Cloud and grab a shareable link with a single click.
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends
I no longer have to drag files into cloud storage, attach images to emails, or upload to third-party services. I capture it, click share, and paste the link. It is one of those workflow improvements that sounds minor until you use it every single day.
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends
Capture beautiful screenshots with CleanShot X
CleanShot X has become one of my most dependable apps on Mac. In fact, all the screenshots you see in this article or any of my articles have been captured using CleanShot X. Yes, it’s a paid app, but it has paid its cost multiple times over with the time it has saved me.
CleanShot X is available as a one-time purchase or through a SetApp subscription. If you want unlimited cloud storage, you have to pay for a monthly subscription. That will also get you advanced features like a custom domain and branding, password-protected link sharing, and more.
For most users, the one-time purchase is more than enough, and it’s what I use. If you spend any time taking screenshots or recording your screen on a Mac, it is absolutely worth every penny.
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