Hi All,

I said I'd report back on the wacom bamboo pen and touch (model CTH-460). It's taken me a little while to get round to it, but here are a few findings. In summary, the pen works well and the touch pad doesn't. Just for the record I'm using a 64-bit version of kubuntu natty with twinview over two screens.

Setting up the driver was relatively straightforward. I used the driver and instructions referred to in this howto:https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Wacom/LatestDriver

The pen works immediately. One slightly off-putting aspect for someone who is used to touchpads on laptops is the automatic set up is for the location to be absolute rather than relative, ie 1-to-1 mapping of each point on the touchpad to the screen, rather than the movement of the cursor starting afresh each time you move. To be honest, I've got used to it now, but you can change it via xsetwacom if you want to: http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/maverick/man1/xsetwacom.1.html

The big downside is the touchpad. Apparently the recent bamboos have 4 finger support, which has messed up the touchpad settings on ubuntu. Therefore every time you lift your finger on or off the touchpad the cursor jumps about 3 inches. Not very helpful! The only place I could find this glitch mentioned is on flavux's comments here: http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9496609&postcount=1 There doesn't seem to be a cure I can find as yet.

Gimp set-up was very easy using the instructions here: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Wacom#Gimp
Again, the pen worked straight away with pressure sensitivity as well.

Slightly worryingly the ubuntu wacom page has been marked for deletion. I couldn't find a more updated version, so I'm not sure what the plan is with this.

I have to admit I haven't really looked at what the buttons do yet. I'm sure they must be useful for something!

Twinview set up works fine, I didn't have to do any extra configuration. My monitors are not exactly the same size, but fairly similar.

So, I'd give it a 6/10 so far. It's definitely an area without much support and is certainly not plug it in and off you go. Using the pen has been surprisingly useful for some aspects of work (eg flicking through brain scans in 3-D projections using a programme called fslview - it's what I do for a living!). I would love to get the touchpad working. If I did, I'd probably get rid of the mouse, but I'm not there yet.

If anyone has got the touchpad working on the most recent models, I'd love to hear about it.

All the best,

Tim





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