Two fingers are accurately reported by latest kernel driver in linuxwacom. Some sort of data related to a 3rd finger may be available; but its value is closer to finger width or similar data. I think that is all hardware can support.
Chris On Wed, Mar 3, 2010 at 8:09 AM, Adrian <[email protected]> wrote: > Hey guys, > I'm having troubles finding the information I'm looking for and I > figured someone in here would know... > > I'd like to pick up a bamboo and work on multi-touch gestures in Linux, but > what I need to know is whether the device itself sends enough data to have > multi-touch gestures or whether it handles the multi-touch internally in the > firmware. > > If I go out and buy one, and stick 4 fingers down on the device, is there > enough data coming out of the device to identify all 4 fingers separately? > > I don't mind if the drivers don't support this yet, that's fixable, but if > it's a hardware/firmware problem I can't really fix that.... > > Help? > > Thanks! > > > A > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval > Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs > proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. > See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev > _______________________________________________ > Linuxwacom-devel mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linuxwacom-devel > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev _______________________________________________ Linuxwacom-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linuxwacom-devel
