One of the best things about the Surface Pro 3 is rwby sex videosits pen. It's changed the way I take notes, brainstorm and review PDFs. As useful as the pen is, however, I can't help but think its implementation in Windows is a half-measure.
Currently, the pen's behavior is different depending on where you use it. In the operating system parts of Windows and in programs like Word, the pen is a mouse replacement. Then in certain apps like OneNote, it acts like a pen that you can draw with. You can mark up on PDF files, but not with JPG or DOC files.
This specificity is fine for knowledgeable users, but for casual users it's confusing to remember what the pen can be used for or where. If there's no clear sense how a tool will be used, chances are it won't be.
For the pen to ever have mainstream adoption, it should be used consistently no matter where you are, like the mouse or keyboard. Ideally, you should be able to write, draw and mark-up with the pen everywhere. The pen doesn't ever need to be a mouse replacement.
It made sense in a pre-touch world, where the pen was needed to be a navigation device. If the pen couldn't be used to navigate, asking users to switch from pen to mouse and back again would have been an unbearable hassle. In that pre-touch world, a pen is more stylus than actual pen.
That's changed with Windows 8, especially on the Modern side, where using a pen to draw and then using a finger to navigate is not only easy, it's intuitive. The only unintuitive part is that the canvas is limited to certain places. There's a huge opportunity for Microsoft to fix this and make the pen great.
For example:
You're probably asking why this is necessary. Two reasons: 1) To demonstrate the pen can be used anywhere. 2) A quick way to take notes. In addition to the standard screen cap, these notes can also be saved, archived and searched, just like if it was drawn on OneNote.
The notes shouldn't be fixed to the screen but to the content displayed. For example, if I scroll to the right, my scribbling should also scroll to the right.
Needless to say, the scribblings can also be deleted; with the button on N-Trig pens, and the "eraser" nub on Wacom pens.
I'd like to see something similar with Microsoft Office. I should be able to type with a keyboard and then reach up with a pen and mark up the document.
When I return to the document the next day, my scribblings should be saved. I should be able to search for them later too. Options to hide or print them all would be great.
How about a non-productivity related use case – being able to write or sketch on photos.
Adding a handwritten note to a photo can add a personal touch that you might treasure as much as the photo itself. In the current implementation, I have to import the photo into a program like OneNote just to write on it. How great would it be if I can just mark up an image from anywhere?
These are just three examples, but you get the idea. I should be able to use the pen everywhere, I should be able to save anythingI write and have it all searchable later. In short, the entire Windows environment should be like one giant OneNote canvas.
I'm sure that the technical implementation won't be easy, and it'll probably have to be done in stages, but the end goal is worth it. Moreover, it's a unique competitive advantage that other platforms like OS X, iOS or Chromebooks cannot easily replicate.
Steve Jobs once famously said that if you need a stylus, you've failed. I completely agree. A stylus is half-pen, half-mouse, with a confused nature that only the most committed will understand.
But this isn't about a stylus, this is about making the pen great.
Miley Cyrus is getting seriously dragged for her critique of hipHow to master Snapchat, Facebook, and Instagram StoriesWe've reached peak sharing because there's now a basketball'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' gets Broadway release dateUberPOOL just got way safer and less stressfulCollege student crawls through air ducts in quest to steal stats examStunning concept shows what iPhone 8 would look like with a touch barSomeone found the original 'StarCraft' source code so Blizzard showered them in giftsAndroid Pay promotion gives users special Star Wars animationsKim Kardashian and Kanye West are dropping the 'sickest' clothing line for kids todayCaffeinated bagels now exist, you fiends'Rough Night' explicit trailer is weird, wild, and perfectStunning concept shows what iPhone 8 would look like with a touch barObama’s White House photographer at it again, but this time with a bittersweet #TBTMicrosoft to announce another SurfaceMicrosoft's Bing wants you to chat with search resultsMichael Phelps on depression: 'There are times that you are going to have to reach out'German intel chief looks to 'wipe out' Russian servers used in cyber attacksThe creator of the toy everybody's obsessed with hasn't seen a penny for it'Rough Night' explicit trailer is weird, wild, and perfect I tried the viral TikTok adjustable buttons and they actually work pretty well On Unpleasantness and Emoji William Meredith’s “Parents” by Dan Piepenbring An Interview with Michael Hofmann A Letter from Delmore Schwartz to James Laughlin The Windows on the World Contest Finalists Sleep of the Just by Sadie Stein A Brief History of Insect Control Apple's Vision Pro will have iPad and iPhone apps from the start Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for September 6 Unpacking a medical meme: How does ibuprofen know where the pain is? Who Are These Future Rock Staff Picks: Staircases, Sister Mountains, Self Annotations by Paul Muldoon Barry Gifford’s Novels Find a New Generation of Readers The Morning News Roundup for December 3, 2014 Wife or Gallows? The Poetry of Julia A. Moore This Week on the Daily by Dan Piepenbring Inside the World’s Worst
3.3268s , 10520.1328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【rwby sex videos】,Openness Information Network