![]() You can turn on a click sound effect that plays whenever you tap the screen with the stylus, you can customize the stylus button options, you can calibrate the accuracy, and you can create a custom pop-up menu that you can set to appear by pressing the stylus button. You’ve got a new tablet settings control panel with a few extra Wacom options. Photoshop, Corel Painter, Illustrator, ZBrush… Anything that ever supported pressure sensitive Wacom graphics tablet input is now going to work with the Surface Pro… and it turns out that they work pretty famously. Those drivers are finally available so many months later and that means you’ll finally see pressure sensitive drawing capabilities in all of the older professional graphics programs that have been in development for 20 or 30 years. At first they thought it was an Adobe issue, but really they just needed some help from Wacom to make the right drivers. My first tweet the day I bought the Surface Pro went to the Surface team explaining that they NEED to implement the WinTab drivers. The hardware supports pressure sensitivity, but with the default drivers, that only worked in certain newer graphics programs like Sketchbook Pro and Manga Studio. ![]() My first and biggest complaint after buying the Surface Pro months ago was that it did not include WinTab drivers for the screen’s pressure sensitive digitizer input.
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