wow that really sucks. Youd think the ipad would be able t handle a simple pen input but nooo it has to lag like hell. i have a less beefy tablet which uses a wacom pen interface and it performs wayyy better than that. So i have to ask , why is this pen so special? You can use a simple stylus on most tablets nowadays. My apad can use stylus for example and thats a tabloet i got off ebay for £50!
@AWriterWandering yes but thats the point , theres no need for a special stylus , you could use anything. The only difference here might be that when you touch the screen with the pen the pen knows its touching the screen and the screen takes input but that said , how would it know where the pen is located if you accidentally touched the screen at the same time? When you say capacitive stylus i assume you mean a capacitive screen.
No, when I say capacitive stylus I mean capacitive stylus. That's what you need to use on most tablets. The capacitive sensor has little or no way of distinguishing these from skin contact. This device uses a separate IR/US-based sensor to track it, so it is completely isolated from the normal finger input. It also appears to have a very fine tip, which capacitive would have trouble picking up.
@AWriterWandering no the capacitive stylus , such as the ones used on wacom tablets/devices use a special pen. ONLY the pen can interact with the screen. I have an old RM Tatung Tablet that i used to use for school and you could press the screen all you want with your fingers and nothing would happen. You are thinking of the resistive ones which are found in most tablets NOWADAYS , these are the ones that cannot distinguish between pen and flesh. Find some info on wacom tablets if you dontbelive
In case my long message didn't go through, Wacoms use inductive pen technology. Capacitive is the finger-friendly technology used on the iPad and it's kin. Resistive is an older technology that is only used on budget tablets nowadays.
Is That a jailbroken Ipad!
ClayFacey3dbody 1 month ago
You can't buy this from Amazon, but it is available on DinoDirect
iDraw3G 3 months ago
if it works as well as it demonstrates, they're onto something pretty big.
palui 4 months ago
APPRICATION
xIIIAlcopwnageIIIx 5 months ago
Looks like the lady on the left really wants to murder the asian girl
MrJiYung 5 months ago
wow that really sucks. Youd think the ipad would be able t handle a simple pen input but nooo it has to lag like hell. i have a less beefy tablet which uses a wacom pen interface and it performs wayyy better than that. So i have to ask , why is this pen so special? You can use a simple stylus on most tablets nowadays. My apad can use stylus for example and thats a tabloet i got off ebay for £50!
jimbo80982 5 months ago
@jimbo80982 cool story bro
z00h 5 months ago
@jimbo80982
With a conventional capacitive stylus the screen can't tell the difference between it and your flesh accidentally making contact.
AWriterWandering 5 months ago
@AWriterWandering yes but thats the point , theres no need for a special stylus , you could use anything. The only difference here might be that when you touch the screen with the pen the pen knows its touching the screen and the screen takes input but that said , how would it know where the pen is located if you accidentally touched the screen at the same time? When you say capacitive stylus i assume you mean a capacitive screen.
jimbo80982 5 months ago
@jimbo80982
No, when I say capacitive stylus I mean capacitive stylus. That's what you need to use on most tablets. The capacitive sensor has little or no way of distinguishing these from skin contact. This device uses a separate IR/US-based sensor to track it, so it is completely isolated from the normal finger input. It also appears to have a very fine tip, which capacitive would have trouble picking up.
AWriterWandering 5 months ago
@AWriterWandering no the capacitive stylus , such as the ones used on wacom tablets/devices use a special pen. ONLY the pen can interact with the screen. I have an old RM Tatung Tablet that i used to use for school and you could press the screen all you want with your fingers and nothing would happen. You are thinking of the resistive ones which are found in most tablets NOWADAYS , these are the ones that cannot distinguish between pen and flesh. Find some info on wacom tablets if you dontbelive
jimbo80982 5 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@jimbo80982
In case my long message didn't go through, Wacoms use inductive pen technology. Capacitive is the finger-friendly technology used on the iPad and it's kin. Resistive is an older technology that is only used on budget tablets nowadays.
AWriterWandering 5 months ago
LOL, What happend to the face ;L
gta4life55 5 months ago
Cool product but not sure how to buy it/. Google didn't help.
alowfey 5 months ago