>> Some of the higher end tablets allow for screen toggling (i.e. toggle
>> the screen the tablet is active on) so you need to check that.
>
> I would have expected this to be the task of the operating system, not
> the tablet.
>
Not windows (at least not with my Wacom graphire using bamboo driver
Rob Antonishen writes:
> Some of the higher end tablets allow for screen toggling (i.e. toggle
> the screen the tablet is active on) so you need to check that.
I would have expected this to be the task of the operating system, not
the tablet.
-- Johan
___
The dual monitor setup is also an issue for some tablets. If you map
the area of both screens to the tablet area you will either have a
different aspect ratio (bad for drawing) or only use a portion of the
tablet.
Some of the higher end tablets allow for screen toggling (i.e. toggle
the screen th
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 5:45 PM, Robert L Cochran
wrote:
> Would a Wacom also be of use to someone like me, I'm just a software
> developer, but I was wondering if I could connect a Wacom to a TV and
> draw diagrams right on the Wacom which could then show on TV. Or am I
> off base there? I too ha
I've been following the discussion of Wacom tablets with great
interest. My wife has a birthday coming up. She has a collection of over
125,000 flower photographs which she mostly likes to view on a Windows
XP computer with two widescreen monitors. I am thinking of presenting
her with a Wacom