It's
got palm rejection, pressure recognition, and a lot more.
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.
Not exact matches
You
get palm / finger
rejection, which means you'll rarely draw an accidental line with your hand.
Drawing next to the screen, rather than on the screen itself as you would with the Apple Pencil, eliminates the problem of
getting your hand in the way of what you're doing, both in terms of visual obfuscation and software
palm rejection.
In Write, in contrast, we had a little more difficulty
getting precise handwriting, though the
palm rejection works very well.
Palm rejection keeps things from
getting messy.
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.
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.
Palm rejection is just terrible, and ram management is plain terrible... basicly everything which is heavier than a gallery
gets killed after few minutes and reloads when u try to
get back to it.