I did have problems with unintended input, however, as the pad's palm rejection didn't always succeed.
Sometimes the N - trig stylus didn't pick up our movements accurately, and unlike Wacom solutions palm rejection doesn't always work.
Not exact matches
There's only one capacitive stylus that gives a thin point, and it doesn't offer pressure sensitivity or
palm rejection.
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.
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.
It has a pencil - like feel, and thanks to the
palm rejection feature it doesn't matter if your hand touches the screen.
Apple has apparently included some new
palm rejection logic in the iPad mini's version of iOS which wards off unwanted touches, and it
did seem to work.
Samsung itself shipped the initial Note with a version of S Memo that didn't have
palm rejection.
Options like
palm rejection, what three finger actions
do, and disabling the touchpad when a mouse is connected are all found here.
Most impressive is Apple's
palm -
rejection technology, as the screen didn't register our resting
palms while drawing.
Apple Pencil works the same on the iPad as it
does on the iPad Pro, with advanced sensors to measure pressure and tilt, advanced
palm rejection, and low latency for seamless note - taking and illustrations.
If the touchpad uses multi-finger gestures or has
palm rejection support so you don't accidentally move the cursor while you're typing, this all has to be implemented by the touchpad driver.
Samsung's Galaxy Note 3 certainly
does the whole handwriting on a smartphone thing better, thanks to its pressure - sensitive S Pen stylus and good
palm rejection.
The stylus performs exactly as it
does on Samsung's Note line of products, including its full
palm rejection and smooth tracing of your movements.
We spent hours playing games on the Dell and found that the trackpad's
palm rejection is superb and didn't cause any accidental clicks.
The glass - coated touchpad feels just fine, and doesn't trigger movements when typing, telling us it has strong
palm rejection.
The
palm rejection system on the Mix is a lot better too, which means you don't tap as many things by accident.
Palm rejection technology is important, and Apple
does it best.
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.
Palm rejection is reportedly on board the iPad Pro, but one recent hands - on impressions video didn't showcase the feature at all.
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.
It has very good
palm rejection software, however, so we didn't experience any inadvertent cursor movement while typing.
With that in mind, this video from Adobe could be showing us that Apple didn't want
palm rejection shown off in this specific instance, and that's it.
The Pixelbook also has
palm -
rejection technology, so you can lean on the screen while using the Pen, and it won't impact what you're
doing.