

Without a strict, universal standard of implementation for these types of popups, getting rid of these popups via the Miro web page capture tool will likely never happen.

On top of all of that, Miro still needs to build a complex algorithm to someone “act” as a real user who is first dismissing these popups. Then, conversations would have to take place to determine how this is implemented, e.g., do they map virtual session to a Miro user profile, e.g., what if one did want an action (e.g., popup) to take place on a site, but another user did not. Click Copy to add the image to your clipboard. Once you are done with the capture, you will see a menu with a couple of options: 'Copy' and 'Add notes'. The way that a website “remembers” that you have visited it before and therefore does not display the popup happens with a mix of cookies/sessions (client- and or server-side).įor the destination server to treat Miro’s web page capture tool as a “person” and “remember” them, Miro would have to create virtual instances for each web page capture session for each website visited. To do this, just hold down the selection tool and drag to the bottom of the page the page will automatically start to scroll so that you can capture everything you need in one go. Miro’s program still does not know where to click to dismiss the message. Ī person on a computer visiting a website from their browser is not the same as Miro’s web page capture program loading a website programmatically, capturing a screenshot, and returning it to a Miro board. There are some websites that I captured where i get the Cookie-Popup instead of the Website although I’ve been there x-times with miro before. I have no idea if this is possible but it should be. It should be possible that the Web-Capture-Tool “remembers” that it vistits the site a second or third time when I try capture the site the second time. This always happens when you visit a Site the first time. I’ve noticed the same with a Cookie-PopUp.
