Sentences with phrase «pen palm rejection»

Not exact matches

Like the modern version of smudging fountain pen all over your book and hand, palm rejection technology means while you are writing with the S - Pen any part of your hand will not affect your work.
A new optional pen has been made for the 2017 model Teclast Tbook 10 S that is different than the pen for the non-S Teclast Tbook 10, but since it lacks palm rejection, I don't see much point, unless you understand how it will behave then.
Palm rejection is enabled when the pen is detected.
With 256 levels of pressure sensitivity and excellent palm rejection, the pen is among the best I've used with a tablet, alongside that of the Toshiba Encore 2 Write.
The pen felt highly responsive, with little lag and with integrated palm - rejection — a useful productivity feature that capacitive - touch styluses can't provide.
Also on the touchy - feely side, it's got palm rejection, a no - battery pen eraser and Dell says its response times smoke Lenovo's X61T.
In addition, many customers who use resistive tablets that support both pen and touch functionality may disable the latter because the palm rejection technology is subpar.
We also experienced better palm rejection when using the pen — we haven't had any accidental touches while scribbling on the new Surfaces.
This Windows 7 tablet comes with a digital pen and an active digitizer which you can use to write on the display which supports multi-touch, gestures and palm rejection.
Samsung somehow managed to resolve the palm rejection a bit better, but the S - pen is quite uncomfortable to hold, and it's not terribly precise either.
In terms of palm rejection, what I found is that once the pen tip is close to the screen (like when the hover icon is present on the screen) then the palm rejection activates.
If you're a lefty, like I am, setting up your pen for left - handed use will affect the palm rejection and general performance of the pen.
The pen is pressure sensitive plus the slate has improved palm rejection.
Since I'm used to the Wacom digitizers where the palm rejection kicks in almost a full inch before the pen reaches the screen, it was a bit frustrating using Adobe Illustrator to get some signage design work done as I found myself often placing my hand down too quickly and invoking some touch screen gestures by mistake.
As mentioned earlier, you really need to get the pen tip very close to the screen before palm rejection kicks in.
The pen needs to be very close to the screen — I'd say about a quarter of an inch — before the pointer registers and palm rejection kicks in.
Both of those are much less than the Wacom MobileStudio Pro (and other Wacom tech tablets) who's palm rejection kicks in when the pen is within about 1 inch of the screen surface.
- Pen digitizer palm rejection requires pen to be very close to the screen - Pen magnet on the edge is too weak to reliably keep it in place while mobile - Alcantara keyboard cover looks great, but can attract crumbs
The stylus market is gigantic: It's full of pens with rubber, mesh, plastic, and disc nibs; some have special features — like palm rejection or pressure sensitivity — that require specific iPad models, while others can be used on any of Apple's multitouch surfaces.
If they get windows 8 or a fully functional onenote on it I would buy one in a heart beat oh and it has to have palm rejection but that is easy to do with a real pen vs capacitive as even my old x61tablet had that feature.
Quick response, optimized pen tip materials and palm rejection also contribute to making the pen feel that comes as close to writing on standard paper when you are taking notes or drawing.
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