Tablets and phones currently have very good passive touchscreens. The problem with using syluses (stylii?) is these touchscreens really weren't designed for them. Adding an active touchscreen would probably remediate these issues, but maybe that would make phones too big, and reduce battery life.
Active styluses pick up and refocus radiation from the screen, powered in a similar way to RFID chips. Maybe instead of providing input through the touchscreen, the stylus could have a tiny digital camera on its tip, detecting which pixel the stylus is on, and sending that info to the phone through Bluetooth or another means?
Perhaps the algorithms that handle touchscreen input are not properly calibrated to styluses, and an app or driver could make them operate more accurately?
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The best stylus experience I've used has been a Wacom dual active/passive screen on an HP tablet/laptop convertible. I had a nearly identical laptop with a passive-only touchscreen, adding the active touchscreen made all of the difference. On Windows 7 in Word, taking notes in economics and college math courses worked pretty well - I could type and take notes, then draw equations and graphs directly with the ink and review tools in Word. The use case was so valuable to me that I'm surprised nobody else did this, and other Office suites don't seem to offer anything even remotely similar.
Styli present a smaller "meat pad" area to the projected capacitive screen so either the controller or the host driver need to be adjusted for that. Apple may have also written their drivers to reject touches that small to avoid accidental extra fingers or hovers from being detected.
If Samsung's pixelsense technology (CCD built into the LCD) takes off, then you could just have the stylus be a passive IR emitter and the thing would work with a point of any size.
The Galaxy Note stylus uses Wacom technology. I don't know if it qualifies as "active" but if you say that it makes the phones bigger and requires bigger batteries then that fits what I know about the Note.
edit: here's a video with someone using the pen from an HP/Wacom "pen-abled" touchsmart tm2 convertable tablet computer with the Galaxy Note:
The stylus looks exactly like the stylus from the HP tx2500 I owned. I don't actually know how large Wacom's technology is nor how much power it draws - I assumed phone manufacturers weren't including the best touchscreen technology for a good reason.
I don't even know what icky means but having Steve Jobs disliking styluses is not a reason to dismiss 5000 years off writing experience. For me the Galaxy Note is on the good tracks: allowing both.
I'll never forget Steve-o in the iPhone announcement keynote saying, "Maybe we'll use a stylus. Stylus?! Yecch! No!" I mostly agree.
There are a few apps I use that benefit from styluses, such as Penultimate (and probably Paper, if I could get over their obscene pricing scheme) but the capacitive stylus I have is really lame and I hate using my finger as a pen.
I guess it might have been better to not use the pay-per-brush model and just offer a single upgrade price to get everything. Still, you get to try it for free.
Most people need a very strong incentive to use a new input method. I'm amazed at how few people bother to use the very useful and intuitive voice commands on every smartphone.
i had stylus with psions and several palms and palm clones. over 10 years of use and never lost a single stylus. make a standard stylus and it becomes easy to keep a spare in your bag.
I'll match your anecdote with mine - I lost the stylus several times (and even once the PalmIIe that some kind lady from France mailed back to me in the US after my trip - something that I would never have expected).
I hate the stylus. When I'm using it, I feel I need to "work" with it. The finger is natural and playful. Humans have been using their fingers to paint and draw long before they used brushes or pens.
A stylus is a powerful tool. To require it is folly. You have to create a platform that either ecompasses both inputs or chooses one. Simplicity would dictate the latter, and the finger is just more human.
and there we run into the problem of one size fits all design. you hate the stylus and i prefer them. it comes down to what you are using your mobile tech for.
with the psions keyboards i could get 30-40 wpm typing. with a stylus i was down to around 20wpm. typing on touch screens is a chore and stuggles approach 20wpm.
but with stylus i also had the option of doodling info on screen. at higher resolution than a finger can achieve. i could get signatures, scribble a hasty note in freehand.
i don't think it should be a requirement but rather an option. but without the option i would lose interest towards a device that has a stylus option. but even then i prefer a keyboard more and currently use a samsung galaxy pro.
You can insert the S-pen inside the Galaxy Note. Apparently some people actually want to do digital handwriting on these devices. I don't really get that myself, but it could be useful for signing documents, I guess? For drawing a stylus is obviously better, and apps like Draw Something can take advantage of that, even for casual non-artist users.
There is no debate, especially on the finger front, sorry.
I had an iPad and iPhone for 3 years.
Switched to a Note and here's what over found so far:
- I still use my finger just as much as an iPhone.
- the larger screen has become a non negotiable. I warn you that I didn't have this opinion before I bought it let alone arm chairing it.
- the stylus is practical and becoming indispensable. Not for the reason that it looks like from a distance.
- the stylus is actually a Wacom stylus. if you haven't, try one out
- my main use case for the stylus is writing notes. I no longer carry a notebook. Everything is it's own digital notebook. After writing notes I can pdf and email them instantly. This is something I enjoyed on my iPad a lot with a stylus.
- if the Note ran iOS it world be perfection for me.
Side notes:
-fits my front Jean pockets just fine. Tested it with over 50 people who seized it to inspect.
- this phone isn't for everyone. If you like using a headset or headphones, this phone is fine. I use Sony mw600. The phone is absolutely drive to hold to my head. The size is just big enough.
- I do wonder why an s2 maybe just didn't get a Attila but I appreciate the bigger size
- it's marginally heavier than an iPhone
- I might have missed it but I don't know how you can talk about something without trying it yourself. I have a tiny blog about two hardcore iPhone users trying out the Galaxy note at http://www.galaxynotehq.com . We cover the great, bad and ugly.
- lastly don't forget iOS is a spitting image of PalmOS from the 90's, which was the original touchphone and iPhone and let you use a stylus too. Sorry for being so old school, I've used the form factor for almost 16 years now.
- the note is truly my communication and consumption device. This post was written on the note. I have blocked all news, Reddit and)+ on my laptop and only use it here, nice productivity boost.
Pencils worked well for a long time of human history, so I think they are not all bad.
Perhaps the problem comes from the phone functionality. It really is unacceptable having to find a pen to be able to answer the phone. Other than that, people have been carrying around pencils for centuries without too much of a problem.
Check out the Jot Pro for iPad. It simulates a full finger press using a disc the size of your fingertip, but the disc is clear, so visually, you're looking at the tip of a pen.
Think about the knock-on effects of supporting two similar but different UI modes... personally, I prefer a stronger more cohesive platform with which to develop an app.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 57.0 ms ] threadActive styluses pick up and refocus radiation from the screen, powered in a similar way to RFID chips. Maybe instead of providing input through the touchscreen, the stylus could have a tiny digital camera on its tip, detecting which pixel the stylus is on, and sending that info to the phone through Bluetooth or another means?
Perhaps the algorithms that handle touchscreen input are not properly calibrated to styluses, and an app or driver could make them operate more accurately?
-------
The best stylus experience I've used has been a Wacom dual active/passive screen on an HP tablet/laptop convertible. I had a nearly identical laptop with a passive-only touchscreen, adding the active touchscreen made all of the difference. On Windows 7 in Word, taking notes in economics and college math courses worked pretty well - I could type and take notes, then draw equations and graphs directly with the ink and review tools in Word. The use case was so valuable to me that I'm surprised nobody else did this, and other Office suites don't seem to offer anything even remotely similar.
If Samsung's pixelsense technology (CCD built into the LCD) takes off, then you could just have the stylus be a passive IR emitter and the thing would work with a point of any size.
edit: here's a video with someone using the pen from an HP/Wacom "pen-abled" touchsmart tm2 convertable tablet computer with the Galaxy Note:
http://youtu.be/IKeb3j2K4WM
Even the pencil tip eraser works.
The stylus looks exactly like the stylus from the HP tx2500 I owned. I don't actually know how large Wacom's technology is nor how much power it draws - I assumed phone manufacturers weren't including the best touchscreen technology for a good reason.
There are a few apps I use that benefit from styluses, such as Penultimate (and probably Paper, if I could get over their obscene pricing scheme) but the capacitive stylus I have is really lame and I hate using my finger as a pen.
I'm not surprised iPhone/iPad apps are moving in this direction, but it still feels like being nickel-and-dimed.
I hate the stylus. When I'm using it, I feel I need to "work" with it. The finger is natural and playful. Humans have been using their fingers to paint and draw long before they used brushes or pens.
A stylus is a powerful tool. To require it is folly. You have to create a platform that either ecompasses both inputs or chooses one. Simplicity would dictate the latter, and the finger is just more human.
with the psions keyboards i could get 30-40 wpm typing. with a stylus i was down to around 20wpm. typing on touch screens is a chore and stuggles approach 20wpm.
but with stylus i also had the option of doodling info on screen. at higher resolution than a finger can achieve. i could get signatures, scribble a hasty note in freehand.
i don't think it should be a requirement but rather an option. but without the option i would lose interest towards a device that has a stylus option. but even then i prefer a keyboard more and currently use a samsung galaxy pro.
I had an iPad and iPhone for 3 years.
Switched to a Note and here's what over found so far:
- I still use my finger just as much as an iPhone.
- the larger screen has become a non negotiable. I warn you that I didn't have this opinion before I bought it let alone arm chairing it.
- the stylus is practical and becoming indispensable. Not for the reason that it looks like from a distance.
- the stylus is actually a Wacom stylus. if you haven't, try one out
- my main use case for the stylus is writing notes. I no longer carry a notebook. Everything is it's own digital notebook. After writing notes I can pdf and email them instantly. This is something I enjoyed on my iPad a lot with a stylus.
- if the Note ran iOS it world be perfection for me.
Side notes:
-fits my front Jean pockets just fine. Tested it with over 50 people who seized it to inspect.
- this phone isn't for everyone. If you like using a headset or headphones, this phone is fine. I use Sony mw600. The phone is absolutely drive to hold to my head. The size is just big enough.
- I do wonder why an s2 maybe just didn't get a Attila but I appreciate the bigger size
- it's marginally heavier than an iPhone
- I might have missed it but I don't know how you can talk about something without trying it yourself. I have a tiny blog about two hardcore iPhone users trying out the Galaxy note at http://www.galaxynotehq.com . We cover the great, bad and ugly.
- lastly don't forget iOS is a spitting image of PalmOS from the 90's, which was the original touchphone and iPhone and let you use a stylus too. Sorry for being so old school, I've used the form factor for almost 16 years now.
- the note is truly my communication and consumption device. This post was written on the note. I have blocked all news, Reddit and)+ on my laptop and only use it here, nice productivity boost.
Perhaps the problem comes from the phone functionality. It really is unacceptable having to find a pen to be able to answer the phone. Other than that, people have been carrying around pencils for centuries without too much of a problem.
http://adonit.net/product/jot-pro/
It's fantastic with any iPad notebook app with wrist rejection. (Only downside: write in cursive otherwise it clacks.)