Smooth Draw 3
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I will have to verify(?) this eraser issue on my OLD Motion Computing LE1600 tablet. It utilizes Wacom and Toshiba components with an integrated mobile graphics card, which for some reason supports OpenGL fairly well, and evidently, ActiveX or DirectX or DirectDraw or whatever.
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I was amused by one of the brush names. "Something like watercolor"
I assume the stylus works correctly on some tablets or there would be a lot of complaints. I'd be interested to here from other users of the Cintiq 21UX, though. As long as the tip of the stylus stayed within about an inch of the tablet surface it was fine but that's not easy to do. Since the cursor doesn't change based on whether you have the eraser or a brush, it's easy to miss that it changed to the eraser until you erase something.
I wonder if you could get a foot switch mapped to Undo.
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Yeah, and as soon as you got tired of the footswitch, you'd want it direct wired to your brain
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They can do that?
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Well, maybe in the movies.
By the way, my tablet stylus does not perform as hoped. Both ends use whatever the current "brush" selection is. The expected eraser function is not present.
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Does it stick with the current brush when you pull the stylus away from the tablet and then move it back in?
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Yes, Dave:
The current brush remains active in my case, even when I move the stylus away from the screen. I checked with the pen brush and the soft eraser brush and the airbrush. I pulled the stylus away much more than 1 inch. Kind of wish the Wacom stylus eraser function would work. However, it would have to select soft or hard eraser.I do not know whether this has anything to do with anything, but in other applications, I do have stylus pressure effects.
I did notice that there is an update to v3.2.7? Have you checked this? Some mention of drivers. -
3.2.7 was the version I tried. I was told they would be looking into the issue but I haven't heard anything since.
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Off Topic: Regarding external wiring to nervous system: I believe there is research going on with auditory nerve and optic nerve external wiring, and isn't there something involving prosthetic limbs?
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Yeah. there's myo-electrics and some implanted electrodes for telling prosthetic limbs what to do. Maybe someday you'll be able to buy a desk chair with electrodes in it. You'll work your computer with your butt.
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