Wacom Mobile Studio Pro For Mac

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Download Wacom Mobile Studio Pro DTHW1620H Driver For Windows 10/8/7 And Mac Digital drawing And Graphics tablet Free. Designed for professionals who want the freedom to create anywhere, but want more space to work, Wacom Mobile Studio Pro 16 packs an entire studio full of powerful creative tools into a line of two mobile pen computers with 15.6' displays.

  1. Wacom Mobile Studio Pro Vs Ipad Pro
  2. Wacom Mobile Studio Pro 13
  3. Wacom Mobile Studio Pro For Mac
  4. Wacom Mobile Studio Pro
  5. Wacom Mobile Studio Pro Usb

The Microsoft Surface Pro 4 may be the fine general-purpose Windows 10 hybrid that launched a category, but the Wacom MobileStudio is a more flexible mobile computer that takes the category to the max with essential sophisticated capabilities for professionals. For one, it offers 8,192 levels of pressure sensitivity with its new Pro Pen 2, far and away the industry leader. It has application-specific programmable hard controls for streamlining operation without a keyboard, because pro content creation is a two-handed job. But as it's a hybrid, you can connect any Bluetooth keyboard to turn it into a Windows 10 laptop. And like the Cintiq line from which it evolved, you can connect it to a system and use it as an interactive pen display and graphics tablet -- a not-so-cheap way of adding a touchscreen to your Mac!

It's not Wacom's first pen computer -- that launched during the Windows 7/Windows 8 era -- but those operating systems simply weren't pen- or touch-friendly. (And MacOS sadly still isn't.) Now, thanks to a rising-Windows 10-tide-lifts-all-boats environment, there's finally software support to make the MSP a truly useful product.

Prices for the MobileStudio 13 run from $1,500 (£1,400, AU$2,650) for the Core i5 model with a 64GB SSD up to $2,500 (£2,300, AU$3,500) for a Core i7 with a 512GB SSD; the MobileStudio 16 costs $2,400 (£2,200, AU$3,500) for the Core i5, 256GB SSD version and $3,000 (£2,750, AU$4,300) for the top-of-the-line Core i7, 512GB SSD model. All the 13-inchers use the integrated Intel Iris Graphics 550 GPU driving a WQHD (2,560x1,440-pixel resolution) screen, while the bigger tablets use discrete Nvidia Quadro workstation-class GPUs (M600M for the Core i5, M1000M for the Core i7) with 4K UHD (3,840x2,160) displays. The top configurations in both sizes incorporate Intel RealSense R200 3D cameras. While the MSP 13 is a reasonably light 2.9 pounds/1,320 g, the MSP 16 weighs a not-insubstantial 5 pounds/2,202 g.

These are not cheap systems. But given how much the MobileStudio does and how sturdy it feels, the prices don't seem too out of line. What does is Wacom's failure to include a stand with them; and frankly, the design should have incorporated a kickstand. As I write the $100 stand isn't yet available, so I didn't get a chance to test it. (I don't see it for the UK or Australia, but the price converts to about £79 and AU$132.) I do know it's only a three-position stand, which isn't as nice as one with continuous tilt options, and it doesn't look like it supports portrait orientation. If the camera/webcam weren't on the side (in landscape mode), that would be a little less irksome.

To take advantage of the tablet as a pen tablet/touch display, one of the capabilities that makes it worth the price premium, you also need to spring for the $70 Wacom Link adapter (£60, AU$99). It requires two ports on your system, USB-A and DisplayPort, which the adapter funnels into a single USB-C connection.

When it's good it's very, very good...

Though I have a few quibbles with it, overall the MSP is terrific. Though there currently aren't any applications that can take advantage of the increased range of pressure sensitivity (it usually takes a little time for them to catch up), you can feel how smooth the higher sample rate makes it feel, and there's the exactly right amount of friction between the nib and the screen. There's no perceptible parallax, the offset between the pen tip and the cursor display, and most of the time there's no noticeable lag. All that's needed to complete the experience would be haptic feedback to let you feel the interaction of the brush and the paper texture.

Once I overcame my typical bout of user stupidity (look at the big graphic showing that it only works with the center USB-C connector, Lori!), it worked quite well hooked up to my desktop via the Wacom Link adapter. And my system is the configuration from hell. The MSP plugged in as the third display on a Mac Pro still running Yosemite with Windows (8!) in a virtual machine and every connector plus two hubs filled to capacity. I had to disconnect a couple of things to make room for the two Link connections, though

The stylus feels physically similar to other current Intuos styluses; some users find them too bulky and prefer the feel of slimmer active styluses. I like the extra heft, though after all these years I still end up accidentally pressing the buttons on barrel.

The display only covers 94 percent of the Adobe RGB gamut, which is a bit disappointing, but I can imagine it's hard enough to cram Wacom's electromagnetic resonance (EMR) stylus technology and 4K resolution (a pixel density of about 280 ppi) into a panel that doesn't suck all the power out of the universe, much less deliver a broader gamut. Though antiglare, it delivers nice, saturated colors.

You'll notice some unsightly light leakage in the corners of the display, but according to Wacom that's the trade-off for the bonding process used to reduce the parallax. If you don't need perfect display uniformity it's only occasionally jarring.

Even the 13-inch fits space on the sides for an SD card slot and three USB-C connectors along with a volume rocker and a Kensington security lock slot to prevent envious officemates from toddling off with it. And when connected to a system via the Link you can use the SD reader. Optimally, I wish it would mount the tablet's SSD for desktop access as well.

And it's pretty sturdy; it survived the accidentally-dragged-off-the-desk drop test when I tripped over the cable as it was charging, though thankfully onto an industrial-carpeted floor (meaning, not very plush or padded, but not cement) and after I'd completed testing it.

When it's not, it's still pretty good

With respect to performance, it does well given what's inside and the power-management trade-offs for the display. But for the expense I would really want something more future-proof: Despite its 3D orientation, the last-generation GPU isn't on Nvidia's VR-ready list, and it could really benefit from the improved power management in the seventh-generation Core processors over the sixth-generation it incorporates. Though our battery testing emphasizes content consumption over creation, for which it lasted only about 4 hours, in practice, it's not a lot better, especially if you like to work with the brightness cranked up.

There's also some serious lag in the CPU/GPU-intensive brushes for Painter 2017, such as the dynamic ones. I suspect that's because the vast increase in sensitivity is just overwhelming the application, and I hope it's something that Corel can fix. But I also experienced occasional brush lag in Photoshop, that would go away after restarting the application. It usually takes a little time for these types of kinks to smooth out.

Ironically, I'm disappointed by Wacom's somewhat chintzy design oversights. In addition to my previous complaints about the stand, the stylus comes with a cheap plastic rest -- it really rolls without it -- and storage tube wthat also holds the spare nibs. Over the course of a single day, I left the stylus in at least three random locations because there's no way to attach it to the tablet. The radial menu is tiny on the small-but-high-resolution screen; the driver needs a way to change the size. In fact, the driver vastly needs an interface update not just to match the operating system interface, but to handle the vastly increased settings complexity. And for years I've been hoping that the company would implement some sort of LED text to dynamically indicate the current mapping of the ExpressKeys, something that seems like a no-brainer for the MSP.

It also really needs to be able to store color calibration profiles in hardware; the colors when using it as a tablet are much different than when it's attached to a system because they're system-dependent. For that last one, though, I've been assured that Wacom's working on it.

Wacom bundles a 12-month subscription to Artec Studio 11 Ultimate to go with the 3D-scanning capabilities of the RealSense camera. But I don't think subscription software bundles add any value to a product aside from the convenience of not having to download a free trial. Basically, it's like saying, 'Try this, have everything you've done locked into a proprietary system, and then start paying us a billion dollars and 99 cents for the privilege of continuing to use it.' In the case of the Artec software, that's $1,200 a year. A typical MSP buyer will probably already have licenses for the software he or she needs, though, so the lack of included perpetually licensable software isn't a big drawback.

Worth the money, though not necessarily all the money

The MobileStudio Pro is a unique solution for the creative nomad who needs power a little more than portability and isn't hamstrung by affordability; while you can get far less expensive but decent tablets for general work, there's nothing from Apple that runs a full operating system and the Windows models really target prosumers rather than professionals. And there's nothing to match the Wacom's multiuse flexibility.

Wacom mobile studio pro vs ipad pro

The MobileStudio Pro 13 is obviously the more portable of the two. Since much of what it's for will likely be GPU-bound, which in the 13 is integrated, I don't think it's worth going for the top configuration of that size. The Core i5 128GB and Core i7 256GB versions seem to be the sweet spot, though really the cheapest model is the best buy in that size as long as you don't care about how limited the storage is (64GB). For the larger model, I think it's probably worth the extra bucks for the increased power of the i7 and M1000M to help push all those pixels, especially once the software starts supporting the full range of pressure. One thing to keep in mind when choosing between the sizes is the MSP 16's screen is rated for a maximum brightness of 324.78 cd/m2 but the MSP 13 only glows to 253.4 cd/m2 while eking out 96 percent of Adobe RGB at 221ppi.

Wacom Cintiq Pro 32 is the ultimate pen-on-screen experience for the next generation of artists, designers and illustrators. Our new larger than ever screens set a whole new standard with breakthrough levels of performance and precision.

Real world colour

The Wacom Cintiq Pro 32in 4K displays shine even more brightly with a billion colours to deliver spectacular true-to-life images. The all-new 32in models feature edge-to-edge glass with more canvas to create.

A new creative standard

Wacom Cintiq Pro is the ultimate pen-on-screen experience for the next generation of artists, designers and illustrators. Our new larger than ever screens set a whole new standard with breakthrough levels of performance and precision.

Feel the detail

Wacom Pro Pen 2 creates a smooth and natural experience so you can draw and design with pixel-perfect precision.

Taking creativity to another dimension

Designed with 3D creativity in mind, the Wacom Pro Pen 3D provides full navigational control in 3D

Control at your fingertips

Three fully customizable pen buttons let you tumble objects, pan, zoom, model, sculpt or modify creative tools in 3D and 2D applications

Wacom Pro Pen 2 performance included

4x greater pressure sensitivity (when compared the the Wacom Pro Pen, exceptional tilt-response and lag-free tracking provide greater creative control

Ready to Create

Works with Wacom MobileStudio Pro, Wacom Cintiq Pro or Wacom Intuos Pro (2017 model) and with any Windows or Mac application

DTH3220K0 / $4,669.95

Use Wacom Cintiq Pro 24 Creative Pen Display for absolute harmony with your work. Premium 4K screen with world class color performance, and virtually no parallax, enhance every creative breakthrough. The Wacom Pro Pen 2 provides state-of-the-art creative pen technology, meaning every stroke, every move of your hand is followed with unerring accuracy.

Product Features:

  • Wacom's most natural and advanced pen performance with 8,192 levels of pressure sensitivity, eraser and virtually lag-free tracking

  • 4K resolution (3840 x 2160) is packed into a 24” LCD display with superb color accuracy (99% of Adobe® RGB)

  • Pen only (DTK2420K0) The ExpressKey™ Remote puts 17 programmable buttons within easy reach. The on-screen keypad and the radial menus offer further one-touch shortcuts

  • Pen & Touch (DTH2420K0) Multi-touch gestures, an on-screen keypad, radial menus and 17 programmable ExpressKeys™ available with ExpressKey™ Remote for one-touch shortcuts to speed your workflow

  • The etched glass screen reduces glare and reflections while providing a distinct, tactile experience as you draw, mimicking the feel of a pen on paper

  • Connect Cintiq Pro Creative Pen Display to your Mac or PC with the included USB-C cable or use the included Wacom Link and cables to connect via Mini DisplayPort or standard USB.

  • Windows 10 and Mac OS compatible

DTK2420K0 (Standard) / $2,859.95
DTH2420K0 (Touch) / $3,579.95

Designed for professionals who want the freedom to create anywhere, but want more space to work, Wacom MobileStudio Pro 16 packs an entire studio full of powerful creative tools into a line of two mobile pen computers with 15.6in displays. Video

Both configurations feature 4x higher pen accuracy and pressure sensitivity, the computing power to run demanding creative 2D, 3D and CAD software, and high display resolution (3840 x 2160) and colour quality (94% Adobe RGB).

The MobileStudio Pro 16 also features discrete NVIDIA Quadro graphics for use in high performance 3D, video and creative workflows. In addition to a complete range of creative features such as customizable ExpressKeys and multi-touch controls, there is also a model with an integrated Intel RealSense camera for capturing 3D scans. MobileStudio Pro 16 is the powerful creative studio that you can take anywhere.

15.6 inch UHD (3840 x 2160)

DTHW1620M / $2,729.95 – 256GB
DTHW1620H / $3,999.95 – 512GB

Designed for professionals who want the freedom to create anywhere, Wacom MobileStudio Pro 13 packs an entire studio full of powerful creative tools into a line of lightweight 13.3in mobile pen computers.

All three models feature 4x higher pen accuracy and pressure sensitivity, computing power configurations capable of running demanding creative 2D, 3D and CAD software, high resolution displays (2560 x 1440) and exceptional colour performance (96% Adobe RGB) in a mobile display.

In addition to a complete range of creative features such as customizable ExpressKeys and multi-touch controls, there is also a model with an integrated Intel RealSense camera for capturing 3D scans. MobileStudio Pro 13 is the only creative tool you need to carry.

13.3 inch Full HD (1920 x 1080)

DTHW1320L / $1,949.95 – 128GB
DTHW1320M / $2,199.95 – 256GB
DTHW1320H / $2,859.95 – 512GB

Now you can work directly on screen with Wacom's line of Cintiq Professional Drawing Tablet Displays

Wacom Cintiq 13HD
Drawing Tablet Display

Experience the power of a high-performance Cintiq in a compact, slim design. The Cintiq 13HD provides artists, designers, illustrators and photographers a premium, pen-on-screen experience on a 13.3in, high-resolution, HD (1920x1080) display.

The compact size and adjustable stand let you position the display in a variety of ergonomic positions. Use it flat on your desktop, hold it in your lap like a sketchbook or attach it to the adjustable stand for 3-different working angles. The wide viewing angle (178°) and the ability to render 16.7 million colors assure that your creative work will look great in any working position.

DTK1300 / $1,139.95

Wacom Cintiq PRo
drawing tablet Display

With a resolution of up to 4K and a wide-gamut display (color accuracy up to 94% of Adobe® RGB), you’ll be able to see your work in life-like detail. Drawing on the etched-glass surface gives you a natural pen-on-paper feel with the perfect amount of pen tip friction. It’s so natural that you’ll almost forget you’re drawing on a screen.

If you want more space to create, Wacom Cintiq Pro 16 has a Up to 4K (3840 x 2160px) resolution and 94% Adobe® RGB color accuracy – perfect for the most demanding painting and retouching jobs.

Both models come with fold-out legs for a comfortable drawing angle.

DTH1320K0 / $1,319.95
DTH1620K0 / $1,979.95

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro For Mac

Wacom Cintiq 22HD
Drawing Tablet Display

The Cintiq 22HD combines a 21.5 inch HD, wide-format LCD with industry-leading pen input capabilities, all in a traditional desktop display. Photographers, designers, artists and other creative professionals can work naturally and intuitively directly on the surface of the display, while enjoying all the creative and efficiency gains that make Cintiq the first choice among professionals.

DTK2200 / $2,279.95

Wacom Cintiq 27QHD touch Drawing Tablet Display

The Cintiq 27QHD creative pen display sets a new standard in color and resolution. The most natural form of creative expression meets an advanced interface design that re-imagines the creative workflow so you don't have to adapt to the tool—the tool adapts to you. Work with hands-on fluidity as you create with a pressure-sensitive pendirectly on an expansive, edgeless glass display.

The Cintiq 27QHD's 27” widescreen 16:9 display offers the highest resolution of any Cintiq (2560 x 1440). Featuring 97% RGB, 1.07 billion colors and REC 709, this premium color display is the ultimate tool for color sensitive workflows. There is no need for a secondary color reference monitor.

DTH2700-D / $2,899.99 (Open Box Demo)

Wacom Intuos Pro (2017)

Some artists and designers work only digitally, while others start on paper. The new Intuos Pro line lets you do both. For all-digital work, choose the standard Intuos Pro. To sketch on paper and refine digitally, select the revolutionary Intuos Pro Paper Edition.

Wacom Intuos Pro sets a new standard for professional pen tablets. The new Wacom Pro Pen 2 features impressive pressure-sensitivity, tilt-response and virtually lag-free tracking. Get natural creative control while you illustrate, edit or design digitally with Intuos Pro.

PTH660 / $499.95 Medium

PTH860 / $699.95 Large

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro Vs Ipad Pro

WACOM INTUOS PRO Paper Edition

The Paper Edition combines the Intuos Pro tablet with a detachable Paper Clip and Finetip Pen. Clip your drawing paper on the tablet and sketch. While you sketch on paper, an editable version is captured and stored on the tablet. You don’t need to be online or connected to a computer when you are sketching, so work anywhere, anytime.

PTH660P / $569.95 Medium

PTH860P / $769.95 Large

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro 13

Wacom Intuos Pro

Gain precision and control, speed your workflow, and take advantage of all the pressure-sensitive capabilities in your favourite creative software, thanks to the innovations built into the Intuos Pro.

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro For Mac

Available while supplies last
PTH451 / $354.95 Small
PTH651 / $429.95 Medium

Student pricing available. Call for details.

Wacom Intuos

Unleash your creativity with the new Intuos. It includes Wacom’s leading pen tablet technology, free downloadable creative software and online training. So whether your dream is starting your portfolio, racking up some ‘likes’, or pushing the limits of creativity, Intuos has everything you need to make it happen.

Intuos Small - Black or Pistachio $139.95

Intuos Medium - Black or Pistachio $279.95

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro

Wacom Intuos Creative Stylus

If you can dream it up, the Intuos Creative Stylus 2 from Wacom can help you bring it to life. It’s ergonomically designed for creative professionals with a thin pressure-sensitive tip that lets you draw, sketch and paint on your iPad with the intuitive and natural feel of pens and brushes.

$89.95

Wacom Mobile Studio Pro Usb

Create your masterpiece on a level that you've never experienced on your iPad. The new Intuos Creative Stylus has a thinner, firmer tip which draws more naturally and lasts much longer. Its new slim design makes your work more visible, giving you better control of your strokes while you draw.','source':'

Create your masterpiece on a level that you've never experienced on your iPad. The new Intuos Creative Stylus has a thinner, firmer tip which draws more naturally and lasts much longer. Its new slim design makes your work more visible, giving you better control of your strokes while you draw.

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