This is very much personal preference, but the matte anti-glare film and the relatively weak backlight (200 nits) grated on me. If you're working with high-end print or only ever think about Adobe RGB, you're not going to buy this device. If you've never heard the terms, then worry not, as I'm mentioning them purely for completeness' sake. That's fine for the majority of people who may be doing online publishing and photography work. The Wacom One's color gamut - which is the colors it can display - is up to 72 percent NTSC / 99 percent sRGB. That includes digital pencils from Staedtler, Lamy and, amusingly enough, Samsung's S-Pen. However, it does work with third-party devices that use the same tech. It's compatible with Wacom's passive styluses - not your fingers. The 13.3-inch, 16:9, 1,920 x 1,080 AHVA display has a matte AG film coating, which makes it feel a bit like a very old Android tablet. It'll never draw coos on your fancy designer's table and Marcel Breuer chair, but it is comfortable to hunch over. The design wants you to rest your forearms on, and over, it on the regular, so it can't be all be razor-sharp edges and jabby corners. Which is why I'm trying it out rather than any of the professional designers on staff, who may see it in a very different light.Īt first blush, it's clearly a Wacom tablet, with a generous (some may say chunky) bezel and soft, round edges. After all, no professional designer currently using a Cintiq is going to step down to a budget device unless it's truly compelling. Because Wacom's newest device is for amateurs, it made sense for an amateur to review it.
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