Skip to content
GearOpen.com

GearOpen.com

GearOpen.com is the hub for the latest developments in technology, AI, software, computers, transportation, consumer electronics, and scientific innovation.

  • Phones
  • Tablets
  • Laptops
  • Computers & IT
  • AI & Bots
  • Apps
  • Gaming
  • Audio & Video
  • Wearables
  • Smart Home
  • Cameras
  • Drones
  • Cars
  • Motorcycles
  • Yachts & Boats
  • Planes
  • Science
  • Tools
  • Toggle search form
1-7

Wacom Intuos Pro (2017) and Intuos Pro Paper review

Posted on April 3, 2017January 17, 2019 By Jarvis

When the Intuos Pro graphics tablet was announced at CES 2017, it sounded a little ho-hum. The reality is way better.

wacom-intuos-pro-paper-edition-06

For the uninitiated, Wacom’s Intuos (and Bamboo) tablets connect as input devices to your computer, adding pressure-sensitive drawing and painting as well as serving as a touchpad. Like its sisterMobileStudio Pro product line of Windows tablets, one highlight of the 2017 Intuos Pro, which uses the same Pro Pen 2, is that it supports 8,192 levels of pressure and 60 degrees of tilt recognition, the most to date. (The actual resolution hasn’t changed, though, remaining at 5,080 lines per inch/100 lines per millimeter.)

The other cool update is a new Paper edition, which includes an EMR-supporting finepoint gel pen. With it, you can draw on any paper while disconnected — it stores up to 200 drawings in the tablet’s built-in memory — and then connect to sync your drawings to its cloud service using the company’s Inkspace app. The strokes are captured in Wacom’s Ink Layer Language (WILL), which allows for text recognition and exporting as a vector format from Inkspace.
…
Read full post here:
https://www.cnet.com/reviews/wacom-intuos-pro-2017-review/

Wearables Tags:app, cloud, computer, Intuos Pro Paper, memory, review, tablet, touchpad, Windows

Post navigation

Previous Post: Asus ROG G752VS-XS74K OC Edition review
Next Post: Xiaomi Mi TV 4A Hands-on Review: specifications, release date, price, buy and video review

Related Posts

Track your sleep with an Apple Watch? Change these settings for more accurate sleep reports Wearables
Should you buy the Oura Ring 4 at its lowest-ever price or fork out for the new Ring 5? Here’s my recommendation Wearables
MPOW H12 Review MPOW H12 Review Wearables
Fitbit smart ring Fitbit could be working on a new smart ring Wearables
Amazon just made the Garmin Venu Sq 2 a bargain fitness tracker Wearables
audio_technica_ath_m50xbt_wireless_over_ear_headphones_1436267 Audio-Technica ATH-M50xBT headphones review Wearables

Copyright © 2026 GearOpen.com.

Powered by PressBook Grid Dark theme