newsline2011 wrote:I am planning to get an Asus Transformer Infinity TF700.
There are a few pressure-sensitive styli out there (Pogo, Jot Touch by Adonit, Jaja, Pressurepen), does anybody made any experience with them ? Does any of them work with TV Paint ?
It seems TV Paint is the only android app currently supporting pressure sensitivity, I am trying to find out if there is any stylus out there that works with it.
Hey,
There are quite a few apps outside of TVPaint that support pressure. Not only does Android 4.x have APIs for pen integration, Samsung's original Note sold a ton and they've had a few contest to inspire SPen(Wacom stylus) created apps.
Here's a list of the apps I use that support pressure:
- TVPaint -- absolutely the best
- LayerPaint -- fantastic application that does what's needed right for a puny $3 price.
- Photoshop Touch
- Infinite Paint
- Sketch Book Pro
Adobe Ideas also supports pressure, but I'm still not sure if I want it.
There are quite few more apps I've found, all with varying degrees of support, but most of them I uninstalled. TVPaint and LayerPaint are the only ones that I've found that have desktop level brush engines and they don't limit on canvas size and the number of layers from what I know of.
I have not used any of those styluses, but have looked into them. Just my opinion, but the Jot Touch looks like the best one and it's actually available for purchase.
I'm not a fan of capacitive styluses -- let alone capacitive screens for drawing -- and in order to achieve pressure, they do so in a round about way(sound or bluetooth) with inherent limitations when compared to how a Wacom stylus works.
I went with the Note 10.1" over the 700, because of the Wacom. The sharper screen on the 700 -- which with my eyes I have to lean up a bit closer than normal to see the difference -- wasn't enough to fight my art side, which absolutely wanted the pen; besides, at 150 ppi the Note is also sharp. Just for reference, I own a TFT101 with keyboard dock and my PC is all Asus components -- I work on both Macs and PCs; I'm just saying I'm a huge fan of Asus.
Anyways, with the Note's Wacom you're getting this over the capacitive options:
- 1024 pressure
- absolutely superior tracking and precision over capacitive
- hover state( So rollover states in TVPaint and on the web. )
- smaller -- natural size -- pen that requires no power source other than the screen
- a pen tip, not some fat tip or odd disc-tip that requires a static charge just to register
And since the Wacom is using a superior magnetic tech to track the pen, it can tell the touch to turn off when the stylus is close enough to the screen; TVPaint and LayerPaint account for this, so I can wrest my hand on the screen as I draw.
Rambles...