![]() I have not yet investigated pressure sensitivity in any programs. GIMP sees it, and allows you to configure the tablet input device, but does not allow it to be used. No idea how to configure the tablet buttons, but one thing at a time. That and I can cruise my desktop using the pen and tablet as a mouse (select, move, etc.). While I probably still need to do some configuration in the art programs, Inkscape and Krita do respond to the pen and tablet and make marks. The only thing I can think of that I did differently was use a different usb port (from several known good usb ports) for the tablet. ![]() Don't ask me why or how, but yesterday the tablet started working in my Mint 17.1. Linux Mint has a great, responsive helpful forum community! Any suggestions? Can I gather any system information for you?įirst, the good news. I have progressed no further since the WizardPen driver install. That link allowed me to install the WizardPen driver which was only momentarily successful. The link they provided is the same Portuguese link you provided. Although their documentation (in brackets below) states that Linux is not supported, the good folks at Ugee Tablets provided the instructions below (kudos to them for trying and not just brushing off Linux support). In this case, you could try either older or newer versions of Krita, but installing the same version again is an exercise in futility.įor some people, removing Krita's settings made some difference, until the next Windows update comes along: you will find Krita 2.9's settings in %APPDATA%\Roaming\krita\share\config\kritarc.Thank you for the prompt response. All you do is getting the same bits you had on your disk again. "Cleaning" the registry is also useless: Krita doesn't store anything in the registry. In other words, reinstalling Krita is useless (unless the actual installation got corrupted it is ALWAYS useless, installing the same version again will NEVER make any difference). Manufacturers don't implement the spec: they try to make their drivers work with some applications, often breaking others in the process. The tablet driver spec is bad, dates back to the days of 16 bits Windows and everyone interprets it in a different way, often over time. That some applications work and others don't also doesn't say anything: it can be pure coincidence. Then, tablet manufacturers are pretty bad when it comes to writing drivers, as you can see from the fact that after updating a driver, applications stop working. In general, Windows 10 is a disaster when it comes to tablet drivers: often after a Windows update, the tablet will stop working. That's the part of your system that stayed the same. ![]() ![]() If you didn't install a different version of Krita, it's obviously not a bug in Krita. ![]()
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