Subscribe in iTunes for Enhanced Podcasts delivered automatically to your computer. Take a look at my video to see what you can do for just $19.99 for Astropad (for a limited time) and $99.99 for the Adonit Jot Touch stylus.Īstropad Graphics Tablet in the iTunes App Store: I have been blown away by my experience with Astropad so far, and I know it’s only going to get better. You can work with the tiniest brushes and tools, and you paint exactly where the tip of the stylus touches your iPad screen. The Adonit Jot Touch stylus is what really takes the Astropad Graphics Tablet app to the professional level. I spoke with the team and found that the Adonit Jot Touch stylus is the way to go. With the Duet, the iPad still won’t give you pressure sensitivity or palm rejection unless you use certain drawing styluses and apps these use Bluetooth. I originally rushed in and bought a Wacom Creative Stylus 2, which is a great stylus, but I found it to be very inaccurate when used with Astropad. You can still use graphics tablets and Cintiqs attached to the computer at the same time. The bottom line, if you’re a PC manufacturer, is this: If your customer didn’t buy your PC because they bought somebody else’s tablet instead, then a tablet sale has to count as a PC sale…because a tablet cost you a sale.If you already own an iPad, you can pick up Astropad right away, and give it a try with your fingers, but to really get the most out of Astropad, you need a stylus. That means tablets do not have to be technically equal to a PC in order to have a financial effect on PC manufacturers. Tablets cut into PC sales to some extent as PC replacements, and to an even larger extent they can delay a customer’s PC upgrade cycle. That’s quite plausible given that so many of today’s applications are web-based and rarely require the full horsepower of a multi-core PC. To get a better answer, think about this question from the point of view of a PC manufacturer (or as they say, “follow the money”). If you have a customer who buys a PC from you on a regular basis, but this year they bought somebody else’s tablet, your customer realized that many or all of their most frequent computer needs can be fulfilled with a tablet. For example, is Microsoft Surface Pro with full Windows 8 a tablet or a PC? And thinking of this as merely a specs comparison makes the questionable assumption that tablet sales and PC sales are functionally separate categories. That perspective may be technically sound, but may not be what matters to the market. Unsurprisingly, some of the most vocal opposition is from the “specs, desktop, and keyboard” geek crowd who insist that tablets can’t do the job that a “real PC” can, and therefore you can’t count a tablet as a PC. Many online commenters question the idea that tablets should be included in PC sales numbers. In the same quarter, non-tablet PC shipments declined, continuing a long trend. Canalys claims that one in six PCs shipped that quarter was an iPad, and that tablets as a group made up one-third of PC shipments in that quarter. Reports from analysts such as Canalys raised a few eyebrows by saying that Apple reached over 20% share of the PC market for the first time in Q4 of 2012…if you count tablets. With editorial direction by page-layout guru and author David Blatner and editor in chief Mike Rankin, InDesign Magazine brings you the in-depth features, reviews, and tutorials you need to master Adobe InDesign. InDesign Magazine is a bimonthly PDF periodical devoted entirely to Adobe InDesign and to the thriving community of InDesign professionals. You can download a free trial issue, and you can save $10 when you sign up for a 1-year membership by using this coupon code: friend. The article is part of an issue of InDesign Magazine that you can buy as a single issue or as part of a subscription. The issue’s called Fresh Tips because it features a long list of genuinely useful InDesign productivity tips…I’m learning from them myself! In addition to my article on Adobe Comp CC, the issue also introduces the new Publish Online feature in InDesign. If you just want to read the article, Adobe has made it available as a free PDF at this link: I take a step-by-step look at this mobile and fully digital idea-to-production workflow in Issue 77 of InDesign Magazine. You can then send that design directly to Adobe InDesign CC, Adobe Photoshop CC, or Adobe Illustrator CC as a fully editable layout, ready for immediate refinement and production. Today, with Adobe Comp CC on the Apple iPad, you can design layouts by sketching gestures with nothing more than your fingers. You then have to take that paper over to your computer and manually translate the sketch into a document you can take through production to final output. It’s a time-honored tradition to sketch a design idea on the nearest piece of paper, such as the back of an envelope or a cocktail napkin.
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