Wacom Bamboo Pen & Touch review

Multitouch trackpad -- rough to the touch
We had a go with this capacitive tablet's touch mode on both Snow Leopard and Windows 7. While the gestures worked as promised in Wacom's demo video, some failed to work in certain areas of each OS. For instance, on a MacBook and Windows 7 touchscreen device you can natively pinch-zoom the file thumbnails, but this wasn't possible on our Mac with the Bamboo. Similarly, the rotation gesture only worked in Preview on Snow Leopard, but not under Windows. Needless to say this was rather annoying and should've been streamlined before launch. Another issue is the friction against our skin: the tablet's active area is covered by rubber-like material, giving a squeaky touch even with just a moderate pressure applied. It's like petting a dry dolphin. See for yourself in the video below.
Pen and no paper
Technically the Bamboo Pen & Touch has a better pen mode than both the original Bamboo tablet ($75) and the current Bamboo Pen ($69) -- same pen active area size, same 2540 dpi resolution, same pen form factor (with eraser feel and two customizable buttons) but pen pressure levels have been doubled up to 1024. After some doodling in Photoshop we found the same surface that was too rubbery for our fingers to be slightly too slippery for the stylus, lacking the advertised "paper-like tablet surface" as found on the original Bamboo. You might not find this an issue though -- some of us at Engadget do prefer slipperiness like that of Wacom's Cintiq. There's not much else to be found on the tablet: four customizable buttons (for mouse clicks, touch toggle, application launch etc.), an LED indicator (dim white in standby, bright white in touch mode and orange in pen mode) and a fabric tug to store your stylus. It's also nice to see that Wacom's killed off the circular trackpad that we hardly ever used on the original Bamboo.

Functionality
As mentioned earlier, we expected the Pen & Touch to increase productivity by combining two types of input onto one peripheral. We assume most tablet users would be using graphics suites like Photoshop and CorelDRAW, so in this case the pen mode would obviously be used for drawing while the touch mode takes care of zooming, rotation and scrolling on the canvas. This worked out to be pretty handy for us in Photoshop, plus we found it much easier to use our fingers to navigate around the toolboxes, as well as accessing the brush menu using the right-click and scrolling gestures. Great potential, only to be spoiled by the less-than-ideal surface textures in each input mode.
Wrap-up
Wacom should be commended for bringing finger tracking to its product line, which has clearly achieved its goal of making our lives easier, but it's a shame that it hasn't got the surface texture and gesture drivers quite right. The rubbery touch is almost enough to force us back to the good old combination of tablet and mouse. We assume the Bamboo Pen might not suffer from the Pen & Touch's slippery problem, but if it does then it's best to get the old Bamboo -- probably only from eBay these days. It'll be cheaper too.



























Um, the pictures aren't advancing.
Why had I not heard of this before?! This sounds like a great tablet
@pcwolff
I have been happy with the original one for years now.. great tablet
Been looking for a new tablet, and after thinking about the Pen & Touch, the previous Bamboo tablet just looks better to me. I can't find it anywhere anymore though...
@SDreamer I don't know which particular model you are looking for, but I just went on Amazon and found some older bamboo models.
Been looking at this for a while now, looks like i'll wait.
I love my Bamboo Pen & Touch. I had never noticed the "slippery" problem, but I'll have to pay more attention next time I use it, I guess.
My only complaints are:
1) the lack of three- and four-finger gestures. Exact 1:1 parity with the Apple trackpad would be ideal. Maybe this can be addressed with an update, but I doubt it. It's not a big problem, though.
2) you can't set application-specific controls for things like the Rotate gesture and whatnot. This could be addressed with a software update, of course.
@Gordon You'd definitely notice that had you used the original Bamboo before.
@Gordon It can't do three or four finger gestures. I asked Wacom if that was a possibility, and they said no.
@Gordon
I find the issue with the surface to be that it's a little uncomfortable to slide your fingers across it for any period of time. No issues about the pen though.
@Gordon
The reason for not having more finger gestures is probably because it's harder to differentiate between them and when you place your hand on the tablet to use the pen.
@AaronX No. The pen mode overrides skin detection anyway.
@Richard Lai
It does. But why doesn't it detect clicks when you put your hand on it with the pen too high to detect?
@AaronX I don't understand your question...
Wacom Bamboo is still a tablet for people to cheap to go out and spend money on their decent tablets. My question is why are we still tooling around with these hand eye coordination tablets when the tablet monitors could be produced for much less than Wacom's Cintqs are sold for considering the technology is being put into everyday devices now for far less than what Wacom claims they cost.
@3dpenguin The new Bamboos have twice as much sensitivity as the Graphires did. For the price, they're fantastic. Sure, I think it's half as sensitive as the Intuos still, but they're very good tablets. I own a Cintiq, too, and of course it's better, but I use the Bamboo when I need to be portable.
I don't see how you can miniaturize a Cintiq much more than it already is right now: A USB cord isn't going to be able to power a real monitor. (Try playing video on one of those USB monitors sometimes; they don't cut it as a full-fledged monitor, which Cintiqs need to be.) And even the best possible battery life on a wireless Cintiq would be a huge impediment for anybody who needs to do real, extensive work with one of them.
Lightpeak might be able to get the Cintiq down to one cable (versus three — power, DVI, and USB — into a under-the-table box and then a single cable into the tablet itself), but until then, I think Wacom's doing them about as well as they can be.
@3dpenguin I'm using my Bamboo for photo retouching, and it works great. Would an Intuos be better? Probably. Worth the price difference? I really don't think so.
And Cintiq... yes, they are nice. But how good is their colour reproduction? And the hand is always blocking parts of the screen. I don't have any problems with hand/eye coordination, so for me a screen-less tablet is a good solution. Also as mouse replacement. For small movements I can use my touchpad.
I do agree that Cintiqs are overpriced.
what song is that in the video? I really really like!
anyway, can you customize the gestures to do something else (like pinch to zoom in opens a new firefox tab) ?
Rush to an ear specialist and tell him your hearing is severely damaged, possibly by an ipod, we're talking cochlear implant time damage.
@electron Regarding song: see 5:57 in video. ;)
@electron
yeah, sorry, everyone... I hadn't watched the last 30 seconds of the vid... and when I tried to reply to my comment, I endaget wasn't showing it... sorry >.
Is the "touch" only reserved for gesture navigation? Can I paint with my fingers, or is that strictly pen only? Been looking for a finger painting tablet for kids to play around with.
Well, you can use it for finger painting of course, but as far as I'm aware you cannot set the trackpad functionality to be mapped to the screen (so they will only be able to paint by moving the mouse like they would with a regular trackpad).
Does anyone else know any different? I'm also quite curious ._.
@Mmmm Donuts
I just checked (I bought one of these a couple weeks ago) and it appears that you can only use it as a touchpad with multitouch gestures - unlike with the pen, you can't map the touchpad to the screen, which makes some sense as you'd have an incredibly frustratingly small amount of accuracy in control.
It would make sense for it to have kids doodle with it, odd that wacom didn't think of that when they actually make pen tablets specifically aimed at (slightly older) kids.
Perhaps it's because the surface doesn't like liquids and with small kids there would be jam and goo and peanutbutter all over it and it would not work anymore as it tried to track the goo :)
I'm so upset with Wacom. As an artist, I use an intuos 3 as my primary input device, and it's madness to me the way these guys update their stuff. How the hell does a $99 cheapy tablet have features than the Intuos 4 doesn't? Speaking of which, the Intuos 4 should be called the intuos 3.5, because basically it fixes the ergronomics issues with the 3, and gives you no more real functionality and zero reason to upgrade from the 3. And the cintiq? Don't get my started. You get a tablet PC that's got a bigger screen similar stylus performance, and COMES with a computer for 3/4 the price of the smallest tablet monitor. Their prices are MADNESS. The 21 inch cintiq should be about $1000-$1500, but the small one should be about the same price as the intuos. Because if they can make this bamboo stuff for the price of an expensive dinner, why are the more expensive tablets priced in the molestation range?
Cause they're the only game in town.
@mike1450, because 90% are used by professionals that just pass the expense on to their customers :)
@mtkupp Well, that's great if you're a big company, but us freelancers get screwed.d
@mike1450
Are you talking about the touch functions? They're more of a prototype. It's too risky adding them to the professional models and finding out they don't work (I'm finding some problems with them).
Also, they need to add some features to appeal to the casual market, since they won't make enough from the professionals alone and this model is a stepping stone to the professional ones.
Does it come with the bonsai tree mr. Miyagi?
Nobody likes to pet their "dolpin" when it's dry--that's why there's lube for that ;)
does it work through paper?
@allu22
The pen will. Don't think the touch will. The pen detects pressure and sends it to the tablet - you can press it with your finger and it'll detect it.
Is there a "Pen, Touch and Built-In Screen" version available for the real serious hardcore folks? My father-in-law is an artist (with degrees and publications to match - not just some guy who calls himself an artist) and he says you can do anything on the Wacoms (or the cheap knockoffs), but without the in-built screen it's slower and less natural and learning it takes longer.
@Dan Fruzzetti
The Thinkpad x200.
Oh yeah, and who doesn't hate a dry dolphin? If i pet ONE MORE dry dolphin, I'll freak out.
Ironically you make the same sound as a dry dolphin when you freak out I'm told.
There is no real multi-touch in this tablet.
The one there is is fake like the one in every old synaptics touchpad, which you can enable with hacked drivers. It can only detect 2 taps very inaccurately. Or one but more or less accurately. That is why some gestures do not work - multi-touch is emulated with driver - it sends keystrokes to a program you use to zoom or rotate or anything and keystrokes differ from program to program. Windows 7 sees it as single-touch device. (but yeah, technically it can be called multi-touch. only not a cool one)
And the second problem is refresh rate. It is 50Hz. 50Hz is just too slow. The pointer jitters. It is difficult to press small buttons on screen if the pointer speed is anything but very-very-slow.
Touch thing just feels bad and broken.
Pen thing is fine, feels alright.
I bought it primarily as a big touchpad and returned it the next day.
Well, I'm not a serious artist, i just call myself one, and don't have any degrees or publications, and I'm not even a father in law, but I agree that there's a "pain in the ass" factor to the screen-less tablet. It's time to get it together Wacom. Apple pulled a really great touch screen out of nowhere for the iphone a few years ago, when there were so few devices that had a great touch-screen experience. Wacom should be way ahead of where they are! They feel old-fashioned.
Sweaty fingers! Just kidding.
Reason it's slow in Windows is probably because Windows' default tablet driver interferes; known to have some issues.
Also, mouse/relative mode is usually a must when you're working with a small tablet and a big screen.
um, someone should mention to the OP that there has always been an option to switch from mouse mode and screen matching. at least for this mac user.
Intuos 3 was a nice design(no clue about 4), but honestly, I have been using my intuos 2 for almost a decade, and have never been jealous of the advancements in extra buttons and the like. With a wacom, just get the biggest one you can afford. i have never used the shortcut buttons, but as a power user, my keyboard shortcuts come built in already.
@Nuclear Bastard King
That option to not map the tablet surface to the screen also exists in Windows. At least with the Intuos 2 drivers.
@Nuclear Bastard King
Do you hold by that recommendation for a casual user? I have been doing PS work for about 2ish years now and have been looking for a tablet that I could use now and then when I feel like it. The touch gestures make this all the more appealing and it seems that the actual pen functionality doesn't suffer at all.
@Nuclear Bastard King I did mention the ability to switch to mouse mode. Look again. ;)
Nuclear Bastard King is right... Wacom gives you no real reason to upgrade. It's a shame, cause I'd buy a cheap cintiq in a heartbeat. Until then my intuos 3 is about as good as it'll get.
Finally.
Wacom prices are freaking stupid. Has anybody tried the $40 tablets from Monoprice? http://www.monoprice.com/products/subdepartment.asp?c_id=108&cp_id=10841
Computer prices are stupid too, has anybody tried to draw a picture of a computer and use that instead of a real one?
Wacom tablets last forever and have good precision, that's why the price is acceptable, and when logitech and razer and MS and such ask $80 to $140 for a damn mouse or a damn keyboard, then $99 for a pentablet is a steal in comparison.
@thud2000
It's an even better bargain if you intend to buy Photoshop Elements anyway, because it comes with BOTH Win and OS X versions. Do the other ones also come with a battery free cordless stylus?
Just because a dolphin is dry doesn't make it a bad dolphin.