Basically title, but I don’t want an iPad because of my “open source mindset” ik it sounds cringe but fr I hate Apple’s philosophy and I don’t want an iPhone to sync every shit. Also I’d like to have a tablet that doesn’t all my data to some big corporation (like Xiaomi or Google), and I don’t know where to start to find it. Do you have some tablets to suggest? Budget is around 300/400€. Thanks to everyone who will respond ✨

  • progettarsi@feddit.itOP
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    1 year ago

    is linux compatible with pens? and most important, is it usable enough? Like I used Ubuntu for 3 months, and ArcoLinux for like 5 months but i always ended up returning to Windows because I practically never did anything productive with Linux. U know i don’t want to spend money and don’t get any support

    • nottheengineer@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Pen support on linux is amazing. On the T935 it worked without any setup and was much better than on windows in terms of input lag and turning the touchscreen off/on properly.

      I used Xournal++ and while the UI is a bit small on a 13" 1080p screen, it worked perfectly.

      Now I remember another thing you should probably look out for: Don’t get anything with a higher resolution than 1080p. Fractional scaling on linux is basically not a thing, so the resolution determines the size of any UI.

    • inasaba@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’ve owned both an X220T and a first generation Yoga. Each has different pen technology, but both worked out of the box on all apps on Linux.

    • ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I had a little trouble with a convertible and it’s touch screen, where it wouldn’t disable the touch screen when the pen was near the screen, so my palm always made xournal.scroll away.

      Turns out there’s an easy fix: the software responsible for touch and pen handling (libinput) does support disabling touch when the pen is near, it just couldn’t figure out which 2 devices belong together. A minimal udev rules file and a reboot fixes it, but the IDs depend on the hardware.
      Fortunately it has since been fixed upstream, so udev rule hacks are not needed anymore unless you run a distro that runs ancient (~2 years, but it varies) packages, like latest openSUSE Leap.