May 6, 2010 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google If you'd like some finer control when using a touch screen, especially on devices with a nice expansive one like the ...
Capacitive screens are all the rage. iOS, Windows Phone, BlackBerry, Android: they all have them. They're smoother and easier to use than the old resistive touchscreens, and all you need is a finger, ...
In order to appease more users who may want finer control of their tablets, Samsung is releasing its own Conductive Pen, priced at $19.99, which would work on the company’s Galaxy Tab Android tablets ...
If you don't want to use your fingers with a capacitive touch-screen, there are now an increasing number of compatible styluses — devices that take advantage of the physics of capacitive screens to ...
Steve Jobs hated the stylus. It’s obvious why: controlling your mobile device with a penlike thing meant having to carry something extra, and Jobs always disdained extra things. “God gave us 10 ...
The Flyer has a capacitive touchscreen with what's been known as an active digitizer, although N-Trig's hesitant about using that term to describe its wares. Basically, like most convertible tablet ...
Steve Jobs may hate the idea of using a stylus on his touchscreen devices, but the fact remains that some consumers simply prefer an intermediary accessory for interaction. Whether it’s too cold ...
In what seems to be a growing trend among smartphone manufacturers, TCL too has come up with a mid-range smartphone that comes with an integrated stylus. Appropriately named the TCL Stylus 5G, the ...
When I’m poking away on my touch screen device, I often wish that I wasn’t getting so many fingerprint smudges all over my pretty screen. I am not a fan of screen protectors, so unless I don some ...
For many years just about every portable device came with a stylus. Whether it was the revolutionary Eo Slate with its PenPoint OS, the doomed Apple Newton, the very successful PalmPilot, or ...