LG active Pen stylus support - LG V60 ThinQ Guides, News, & Discussion

Wacom active static pen
Floating screen and handwriting-sketch available
Built-in battery … 50,000 won
LG stylus dedicated pen
LG Electronics is equipped with AES-style stylus pen recognition on the LG V60 ThinQ 5G and the new dual screen.
LG Electronics chose the stylus pen as a smartphone new weapon following the dual screen. The LG V60 ThinQ 5G supports Wacom Active Electrostatic (AES) pens, providing a free writing and creative environment.
LG Electronics has added a new Wacom AES driver IC to the LG V60 ThinQ 5G display and the new dual screen. In line with product launches in North America and Europe, LG's exclusive stylus pen will also be introduced.
It is a form of carrying a pen, not storing it in a device. It's closer to Apple's iPad and Apple Pencil than Samsung's Galaxy Note. The combination of dual screens that provide additional screens and a pen that supports free input creates a unique product identity.
The LG V60 ThinQ 5G main screen as well as the dual screen can be input with a stylus pen. You can have a video or app on one screen and write or sketch on another screen. Nebo, a handwriting app that converts handwriting, figures, and formulas into digital, is installed.
Compatible with all pens with Wacom AES. Depending on the region, the pens are said to be sold separately or as a free gift.
LG V60 ThinQ 5G
LG Electronics introduces the stylus pen support feature only on the LG V60 ThinQ 5G homepage in Europe, including Italy. In North America, it was not mentioned at the time of the product release, but the functionality is supported the same. It is interpreted as a difference according to customer demand and marketing strategy by region.
The AES, supported by the LG V60 ThinQ 5G, incorporates a battery inside the pen itself. It is similar in size and shape to a regular pen, which is advantageous in grip.
Bamboo Ink, the basic model of the Wacom AES stylus family, uses AAAA batteries and recognizes up to 4096 levels of pressure. The price is about 50,000 won, and LG's pen is also expected to be similar.
LG Electronics LG Gram Two-in-One
LG Electronics also loaded the related functions on the LG Gram Two-in-One laptop, which rotates the screen 360 degrees. The Wacom stylus pen, which comes as a standard component, is also compatible with the LG V60 ThinQ 5G.
An LG Electronics official said, “We expect the demand for smart pens will increase in the North American smartphone market, centering on 5G smartphones.”
LG Electronics will launch the LG V60 ThinQ 5G in major Asian countries except Europe and Korea this month, starting in North America. In Korea, the company will introduce a 'mass premium' model with performance at a reasonable price in the second quarter.

Awesome to hear that any Wacom AES stylus will work with the phone.

I can confirm that the Wacom AES based pens work on this device. I have the AT&T variant of the V60 and I'm using the pen that came with my HP Elite X2. I'm going to try to find an app that supports pressure sensitivity in these pens to see if it works on this phone.
Update: Autodesk SketchBook supports pressure, but the built in QMemo app does not seem to support in or at least i couldn't get it to work/make any noticeable difference.

stepheng273 said:
I can confirm that the Wacom AES based pens work on this device. I have the AT&T variant of the V60 and I'm using the pen that came with my HP Elite X2. I'm going to try to find an app that supports pressure sensitivity in these pens to see if it works on this phone.
Update: Autodesk SketchBook supports pressure, but the built in QMemo app does not seem to support in or at least i couldn't get it to work/make any noticeable difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same here. I used the pen that came with Dell XPS 15 and it works great on most apps. :good:

stepheng273 said:
I can confirm that the Wacom AES based pens work on this device. I have the AT&T variant of the V60 and I'm using the pen that came with my HP Elite X2. I'm going to try to find an app that supports pressure sensitivity in these pens to see if it works on this phone.
Update: Autodesk SketchBook supports pressure, but the built in QMemo app does not seem to support in or at least i couldn't get it to work/make any noticeable difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I bought that LG Active Pen the OP mentioned and it works great with the V60. I also bought the Bamboo Ink and Ink Plus and both also work fine. I figure any wacom AES stylus/pen would.
All three are smooth and have pressure sensitivity. As for Qmemo and the built in Nebo apps, the pressure sensitivity does work with all 3 pens I have mentioned.

I'm able to use Bamboo Ink with LG's QuickMemo+ and Nebo apps. But when i press the Ink's side buttons, nothing happens (despite configuring the Pen key shortcut settings in the V60). Can anyone help?

Problem solved. Just realized i need to point the stylus tip close to the screen in order to activate the side buttons!

wwyjoe said:
I'm able to use Bamboo Ink with LG's QuickMemo+ and Nebo apps. But when i press the Ink's side buttons, nothing happens (despite configuring the Pen key shortcut settings in the V60). Can anyone help?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Quick memo does it support pressure sensitivity & Palm rejection

I bought the second generation Meko stylus but just realized I used ADB to nuke LG QuickMemo+. Woops!

twospirits said:
Awesome to hear that any Wacom AES stylus will work with the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wacom Intuos Pens do NOT work... they MUST be AES! ... I tried...

slyguy2000 said:
Wacom Intuos Pens do NOT work... they MUST be AES! ... I tried...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Umm if i am not mistaken the pen that comes with the Wacom Intuos "Wacom Pen 4K (LP-1100K) " is a EMR type pen, so naturally it won't work on the V60. It has to be AES.

if only the Samsung note spen would work with the v60, im not sure id be happy to carry a large pen in my pocket and the note s pen would be a perfect size... anyone know of smaller stylus that works on the LG v60?

Ever since it was announced I've been looking at those AES style pens for work. Now if I could find someone with a cracked 2nd screen that works so I can use parts from my case to fix it.

I got a Heiyo Active Stylus and can confirm that it does NOT work with the V60.
https://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Rechargeable-Supporting-Touchsreen-Sensitivity/dp/B07JCS4VBL
does anyone know of a USB rechargeable stylus that has AES?

Related

Surface Tab for Photographers?

Looking at the new Surface tab and its features, it looks really nice. One thing that I noticed is it has pen capabilities. I have not been able to find much on the specs of this side of the tab though.
This still has me excited however as a photog. Do you think this might be a cheaper - although reduced feature - alternative to a Wacom Tablet? I bet photo editing and even full on image creation could be pretty nice on this thing.
Your thoughts?
I was thinking the same thing.
We kknow it will run Lightroom and I hope it will run Photoshop. I picture this also working as a Live view extender.
It is the Windows 8 Pro version of Surface that supports the pen input. Therefore, it is probably very similar in functionality to an existing Windows 7 tablet running Windows 8 release preview. i.e. Asus EP121, Samsung slate, etc.
The only question is what digitizer and how many levels of pressure input it supports. This is still unknown. However, given that EP121 shipped with 4GB RAM, I would expect that Windows 8 Pro would ship with at least 8GB of RAM.
groaner said:
I was thinking the same thing.
We kknow it will run Lightroom and I hope it will run Photoshop. I picture this also working as a Live view extender.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A live view extender would be awesome. I really hope it runs PS because I would love to just draw directly on the tab. I was looking at one of those Wacom tabs but those look a bit to large to be ergonomic for me - as awesome as they are.
Hatefly said:
A live view extender would be awesome. I really hope it runs PS because I would love to just draw directly on the tab. I was looking at one of those Wacom tabs but those look a bit to large to be ergonomic for me - as awesome as they are.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I bought the bamboo for detail photo editing and its fantastic! Only $100.
wrexus said:
It is the Windows 8 Pro version of Surface that supports the pen input. Therefore, it is probably very similar in functionality to an existing Windows 7 tablet running Windows 8 release preview. i.e. Asus EP121, Samsung slate, etc.
The only question is what digitizer and how many levels of pressure input it supports. This is still unknown. However, given that EP121 shipped with 4GB RAM, I would expect that Windows 8 Pro would ship with at least 8GB of RAM.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I noticed this too. Windows-RT will not do pen input. I wonder if this really is down to ARM not being able to handle it, or whether it is an artificial limitation put up by Microsoft to differentiate the Pro offering? If it is the latter, it would be pathetic.
The galaxy note has pen input and runs arm. Although i dont know the pressure and all that, im no photographer... and surface pro ofcourse will run PS and it supports regular exe programs. And cs6 works fine with windows 8
Sent from my DROID3 using Tapatalk 2

Galaxy Note II s- Pen works on Surface Pro 2

I just picked up my Surface Pro 2 64 GB yesterday.
This information would probably only appeal to a small minority of users but I discovered that my s-Pen on my Galaxy Note 2 also works on my Surface Pro 2. The s-Pen button also works on the Surface Pro 2.
This is a plus as it solves the need for a spare pen for me. I was a little concerned about how to store the Surface Pro pen while on the go but the answer is that it really doesn't matter if I have it on me because I always have my smartphone with me.
Naturally, the reverse is true too. The Surface Pro 2 pen also works on the Galaxy Note 2.
This means that the s-Pen's on the Galaxy Note tablets (10 & 8) should also work.
This is because the samsung S-Pen is a rebranding of wacom's technology (used under license). The surface pro also uses wacom. They are essentially both using the exact same tech.
The first gen galaxy note phablet did use a version with a lower pressure sensitivity though, I don't know if thats a change on the phone or stylus side and whether it would cause a forward/backward compatibility issue or not.
SixSixSevenSeven said:
This is because the samsung S-Pen is a rebranding of wacom's technology (used under license). The surface pro also uses wacom. They are essentially both using the exact same tech.
The first gen galaxy note phablet did use a version with a lower pressure sensitivity though, I don't know if thats a change on the phone or stylus side and whether it would cause a forward/backward compatibility issue or not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That works for me.
Actually,I like using the surface pen on the phone more than the s-pen.

Cube i7 Stylus review: a Core-M tablet with Wacom pen

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With the help of Intel and Microsoft, many Chinese companies based in Shenzhen have been transformed from budget Android tablet makers to PC manufacturers. Cube, as one of the front-running Shenzhen brands, released in January, 2015 their first business-focused tablet – the Cube i7, which is also known as the first Core-M powered tablet from China. The Cube i7 was proved to be a huge success for the Chinese company. It won numerous awards and got more than 99% of positive feedback from the buyers on JD.com, the largest Chinese online shopping mall. With this much confidence, Cube released their second Core-M tablet recently, and this time it is paired with a Wacom pen.
The i7 Stylus, which comes with a much lower price compared to the original i7, has attracted lots of attentions since its announcement. The domestic price of the i7 Stylus is RMB2,099($338), and the price for oversea buyers is $499, but Cube will host many sales event where buyers could get the tablet for only $299 including shipping, the first event held on Aliexpress on July, 23rd was extremely successful, 3,000 units were sold in just one day.
Cube i7 Stylus Specs
OS: Windows 8.1 (will be updated to Windows 10 soon)
Screen: 10.6-inch IPS, 10-point multi-touch, IGZO
Display Resolution: 1920 x 1080 (16:9)
CPU: Intel Broadwell Core-M 5Y10c
CPU Frequency: 0.8GHz (Base clock) – 2.0GHZ (Turbo clock)
GPU: Intel HD Graphics 5300
RAM / Storage: 4GB DDR3L / 64GB SSD
Function: WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, 4G, USB Host, HDMI
WiFi: 802.11 b/g/n, WiFi hotspot
Camera: 5MP back camera, 2MP front camera
Battery: 9,000mAh
Ports: Micro SD Card Slot, Micro USB 3.0 Port, 3.5mm Headphone Jack, DC Charging Port
Size: 273.77*172.03*10.5mm, Weight: 690g, Color: Black front and blue rear
Retail package
The packaging of the i7 Stylus is very nicely designed, inside we found a i7 Stylus tablet, a DC charger of 12V-2.5A, an OTG adapter, a user manual, a warranty card, a VIP card, and a quality certificate.
Design and build
If you’ve seen the Cube i7 in the flesh, the i7 Stylus looks utterly familiar. The similar sturdy but sleek metal body, the similar gently curved corners and wide black bezel, the same subtle Windows logo on the front. The i7 Stylus consistently feels great in hand, and shrugs off smudges well. With the proper screen protection, it could easily survive the day-to-day rigors of a traveling professional, and even the occasional drop. The Cube i7 is once remarked as one of the best built non-mainstream devices on the market, and we believe that the i7 Stylus could get the same rating in this particular area.
Although the i7 Stylus is not really a light tablet, the weight is evenly distributed, and no points flex or creek under moderate pressure.
The front of the tablet is dominated by the screen and relatively big bezels, below the screen you will find a touch-sensitive Windows key, and above the screen is a 2MP front-facing camera for video chat.
The i7 Stylus has a Micro SD slot, a Micro USB 3.0 port, a Micro HDMI port, a 3.5mm headphone jack, and a DC charging port along with the power button and volume rocker on its outer surface.
The magnetic connectors on the bottom edge instantly catch hold of the optional keyboard base, so that you never really have to guide them in. And once they’re in place, you can dangle the tablet from the keyboard if you want — that thing is staying put. Although the i7 Stylus has a footprint different from the i7, but it does have the same magnetic docking seen on the i7. As a result, it is compatible with the keyboard base designed for the later.
My only complaint about the design is the absence of a full USB port on the tablet. You always need to carry an adapter or the keyboard base if you want to connect the tablet with input devices or storage via USB. Compared to the design language of the i7 Stylus, I really do prefer Ramos’ approach with the M12, which comes with a full USB 3.0 port and an adjustable kickstand.
Display and Speakers
The Cube i7 Stylus has a 10.6-inch IPS display, with a 1920 x 1080 resolution and 16:9 aspect ratio. In terms of pixel density, the i7 Stylus has about 208 pixels per inch, whereas the Cube i7 has about 189 PPI.
As expected, the i7 Stylus’ screen looks great. Viewing angles are wide, colors accurate, and it shrugs off glare quite well, definitely much better than the LCD panels on average laptops.
Even compared to superb displays such as the one on the Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro, the i7 Stylus’ screen still holds its ground. I admit that I do prefer the somewhat over-saturated colors on Samsung’s PLS screen most of the time, but there are people more comfortable with the slightly more true-to-life colors on the i7 Stylus’ IPS display.
If there is a complaint, it’s that things can feel a bit tinnier on the desktop side compared to the Cube i7 and Microsoft Surface Pro 3, owing to the slightly smaller screen. Though it supports touch, users will likely turn to a mouse, trackpad, or pen for navigation here, as the desktop requires a good amount of precision.
The speakers are very well placed on the right side of the tablet. The sound is flat, but it’s balanced well enough with little to no distortion, and the volume is acceptable for watching videos in a quiet room. If you plug in a pair of high-end headphones or nice speakers, you will notice that the i7 Stylus in no average Chinese tablet in terms of sound quality, thanks to the wonderful Realtek ALC269 sound card used in the tablet.
Pen and touchscreen
The stylus is a big point of differentiation from most other Core-M powered Windows 8 hybrids. The good news is that the pen paired with the Cube i7 Stylus is based on Wacom technology, which means it is snappy and super responsive, and a genuine pleasure to use on the tablet’s high-resolution screen, the bad news is that you won’t find it in the retail package of the i7 Stylus tablet because the pen is sold separately for $32.
Unlike the tiny pen hidden in the back of the Samsung Ativ Smart PC Pro, the pen that’s paired with the i7 Stylus is the size of a normal ink pen, with an eraser button on one end and a large button placed comfortably on the side. Click it and you have a right-mouse button with a beautifully positive action.
I have seen Wacom pens which have shallow, flimsy buttons that make it hard to tell when you’ve pressed them, but no such problems occur to the pen that comes with the i7 Stylus. Turn it over and you can wipe out what you just wrote or drew.
Writing with the pen in applications such as OneNote for Windows 8, in the Microsoft Office programs or in the handwriting recognition panel of the on-screen keyboard is smooth and accurate.
And while the handwriting recognition isn’t perfect, it’s accurate enough to make notes searchable or to let you write in a URL. Certain applications can even make use of the pen’s 1,024 levels of pressure sensitivity. For example, it makes the pen very much of a joy for working in Photoshop or in natural media painting tools such as ArtRage or Fresh Paint.
If you’re using a watercolour brush or a pastel crayon on a textured surface, drawing with your finger gives you a single, solid weight – more like a felt-tip pen or a bucket fill. With the Wacom pen, you can stroke lightly to get a thin light, light wash or gentle crayon stroke, or scribble fast and hard to get thicker, heavier lines.
The pen is also very accurate for selecting small icons in a complex interface such as Photoshop, or opening a link on an heavily loaded web page (much easier than the small touchpad on the Keyboard base, or your finger on the screen).
The combination of pen and touchscreen makes i7 Stylus extraordinarily versatile for drawing, sketching, painting, image editing and note taking.
Cube claims that the keyboard base designed for the i7 Stylus will feature a slot for the Wacom pen, so when you are not using it, you can just push it into the keyboard. But as we have neither received the keyboard nor seen one, we’re in no position to say whether it is a smart design or not.
In an ideal world, we’d prefer to have a permanent place to keep the pen on the tablet itself, instead of on the keyboard base. As we do often use the i7 Stylus as a standalone tablet, and only need to connect it to the keyboard base when we need to do a lot of typing.
Software and interface
The i7 Stylus ships with licensed Windows 8.1 with bing, and will be updated to Windows 10 within August. Unlike the Cube i7, the i7 Stylus does come with 1 year of authorization of Microsoft Office 365, the most important productive tools for any Windows tablets. Both the Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 are something of a hybrid, with both desktop and the Windows Store apps, touch and keyboard, the control panel and the finger-friendly PC Settings app.
On the i7 Stylus, as long as you’re comfortable with gestures such as swiping to open the charms bar, switching apps and closing an app you don’t want, the two fit together almost seamlessly.
You can swipe across the Start screen fluidly, pinch for semantic zoom, swipe up to get rid of tiles you don’t want, snap two apps (including the desktop) side by side – that’s great for chatting on Facebook or Skype while you work in one or two office programs.
I often read my business Emails and signed some of the attached PDF files with the Wacom pen at the same time.
All of this works on any Windows 8 PC with high enough screen resolution, but it is extremely smooth on the i7 Stylus – as the slate is powered by one of the stronger processors.
Performance
The Cube i7 Stylus is powered by a Core-M 5Y10c processor. The dual-core CPU has a base clock of 0.8GHz and a turbo clock of 2.0GHz, while the GPU is a mighty Intel HD Graphics 5300 running at 1GHz. There is 4GB RAM on board to take care of big productivity programs and multi-tasking, There is 64GB SSD internal storage as well as a Micro SD card slot which supports cards up to 128GB.
As you’d expect from an Ultrabook that just happens not to have a permanent keyboard, the i7 Stylus is fast. It boots in less than 10 seconds, and takes the same time to resume from hibernation, thanks to the high-speed SSD.
If you haven’t used the Core-M powered tablets or Ultrabook and don’t know what to expect from the i7 Stylus. Well, it’s almost on par with the latest Core i3 processors in terms of processing power. If you want us to compare the Cube i7 Stylus to the Atom Bay-trail powered Windows tablets such as the ASUS A100T or the latest Microsoft Surface 3, the i7 Stylus is definitely much, much faster. The benchmark scores above tell the story.
When running Photoshop and applying complex filters, editing 15GB raw images in Lightroom, rendering HD videos in Premiere Pro, watching 450 fish swimming at 60fps in the FishIE benchmark, the Core-M 5Y10c in the I7 Stylus shows its speed and power.
You’ll have no problem transcoding audio and video, running Visual Studio or using modelling and CAD software.
Unfortunately, as the i7 Stylus is fanless, its metallic rear side did get quite hot when we were running big applications and benchmarks, sometimes even to a point where I want to get it off my hands.
Battery Life
The i7 Stylus packs a 9,000mAh Li-Po battery, with the screen at a comfortable brightness (around 30%) for working indoor, running several desktop programs and Windows Store apps at the same time, with Wi-Fi on and the keyboard base in use, browsing the web and receiving and sending email, we were routinely able to work around 6 hours.
Depending on what you do, this is going to vary the way it does on any other notebook or tablet. Play games or browse complex web pages that use the GPU more, and you’ll get shorter battery life. Turn off Wi-Fi and turn the brightness down and unplug the keyboard and you’ll get longer battery life.
In our standard cngadget battery rundown test, we loop a 1080P video on the i7 Stylus with 50% screen brightness and 50% volume from the built-in speakers, the tablet lasted 5 hours and 12 minutes until automatic shutdown. This result put the i7 Stylus behind most of the fanless Windows tablets we’ve tested. It is also less screen time than what the Surface Pro 3 or Surface 3 are able to offer.
Connectivity
The i7 Stylus offer many connectivity options: it has dual-band 2.4G/5G WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, a Micro USB 3.0 port for hosting input and external storage, a Micro SD card slot which supports cards up to 128GB, and a Micro HDMI port to output the visuals to a larger display. With the keyboard base connected, you will have two extra USB 2.0 ports, which frees you from the awkward OTG adapter. The i7 Stylus doesn't come with a Micro SIM card slot seen on the i7, but it isn't really a letdown since most of the Windows tablets and Ultrabooks don't have one. And the fact that even the cheapest budget smartphones now come with 4G data access and Wi-Fi hotspot functions makes the SIM card slot on a tablet even less of a selling point.
Cameras
We’ve seen outstanding camera performances on some of Cube’s flagship Android slates such as the Talk 9X and T9, but with the i7 Stylus, it is a whole different story. While the 2MP front-facing camera is decent enough for video chat, the 5MP main camera is really bad, probably one of the worst we have seen on any tablet.
Even with decent lighting, the photos can still be very noisy and not clear enough for Facebook or Instagram updates.
Summary
Even with a pen-enabled high-resolution screen, a capable Core-M processor, 4GB RAM, SSD and a well-built keyboard base, the i7 Stylus still struggles to provide the same experience as a full-blown laptop: the standing angle is not adjustable; the 64GB internal storage is too small for a PC; without a left and right button, the touchpad on the keyboard base is not always easy to use….
However, if you’ve ever wanted a lightweight tablet PC for taking handwritten notes and sketching on, and prefer not to spend as much as $600 on a Microsoft Surface 3 or to tolerate the somewhat sluggish performance of the Atom based Windows tablets, the i7 Stylus could be what you’ve been looking for.
The good
The 10.6-inch Full HD IPS display has wide viewing angles, true-to-life colors and amazing brightness.
The Core-M 5Y10c processor and 4GM RAM are more than capable of dealing with heavy business tasks.
The i7 Stylus is shipped with Licensed Windows 8.1, which will soom be updated to Windows 10, and there is also one year of free subscription of Office 365.
With a Wacom-made digitizer layer under the touchscreen, the i7 Stylus works wonderfully with a Wacom pen, which further enhances its productivity.
The SSD in the i7 Stylus is fast, many times faster than the eMMc storage in the PIPO W8 and Microsoft Surface 3.
Priced at only $338, it is arguably one of the most cost-efficient business-focused Windows tablets out there.
The bad
The battery life of the i7 is below the average of Core-M powered tablets.
The rear side gets quite hot when the CPU is running at full load.
The rear-facing camera is low-quality and not useful at all.
That looks nice!
good review thank you very much
Great review!
Can you install linux on that tablet?
p3rand0r said:
Great review!
Can you install linux on that tablet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think it is possible, but I am no fan of Linux.
ahmed1994 said:
good review thank you very much
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for reading it.
Hi,
also got this tablet. Quality is very good. Compared do Pipo which i've got its big improvement.
But got two questions:
Made update to Win 10. As I see Cube come with 1 year Office.
I don't see that option in W10. I know - i should firstly activate it on W8.1
Is there any image to recovery to W8.1 ?
Second question - ordered with Pen - but didn't get it.
Has any one know which wacom pens are compatible.
I got Wacom Bamboo and it for sure is not compatible.
Thanks
Bartrek
bartwaw said:
Hi,
also got this tablet. Quality is very good. Compared do Pipo which i've got its big improvement.
But got two questions:
Made update to Win 10. As I see Cube come with 1 year Office.
I don't see that option in W10. I know - i should firstly activate it on W8.1
Is there any image to recovery to W8.1 ?
Second question - ordered with Pen - but didn't get it.
Has any one know which wacom pens are compatible.
I got Wacom Bamboo and it for sure is not compatible.
Thanks
Bartrek
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the windows 8.1 preinstalled on the i7 Stylus is Windows 8.1 with bing, but the image you could find on Cube's official website is Windows 8.1 professional, you won't be able to activate the Windows license once you flash that image. Cube has yet to fix this issue,.so mu answer to your question now is no, but i will keep u posted and let u know as soon as they fix this issue.
Sent from my LG-F460K using XDA Free mobile app
Hi,
Thanks for the review! Could you please confirm if the WiFi chip supports 5GHz networks? This review says the tablet only supports 2.4GHz.
Perhaps they're shipping this model with different wireless connectivity chips?
ToTTenTranz said:
Hi,
Thanks for the review! Could you please confirm if the WiFi chip supports 5GHz networks? This review says the tablet only supports 2.4GHz.
Perhaps they're shipping this model with different wireless connectivity chips?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No the Chip is a Realtek RTL8723BU which only supports 2.4GHz 802.11ngb upto 150Mbps + Bluetooth 4.0. Which is insanely slow as all my devices are hooked upto gigabit links.
The chip performance is really bad and you probably have to do a mod to the antenna to get 3MB/s+ as I can only achieve 2MB/s maxed out.
Damn... what's up with all chinese devices getting terrible wireless connectivity?
hi what happend to the pictures? i cant see any of them... all broken
Hello Jupiter2012, I would like to ask whether you could edit 1080p video smoothly on Premiere pro using the Cube i7 Stylus?
Thanks!
Ditto. I'm curious to see how well Cube i7 can handle premiere pro. I will need editing 1080p short videos as well and having no lag preview playback would be nice. Or would you recommend other cheap windows tablet for this application?
Great review.
cherremvp said:
Great review.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for reading it.
来自我的 LG-F460L 上的 Tapatalk
K koo
I could buy this tablet (with keyboard) in like new conditions for a price of 180 euro.
Does it worth or for less than 250 euro it's possible to find a better tablet/2in1/convertible ?
Thanks.
Sent with my Huawei Nova Titanium
TapaSte said:
I could buy this tablet (with keyboard) in like new conditions for a price of 180 euro.
Does it worth or for less than 250 euro it's possible to find a better tablet/2in1/convertible ?
Thanks.
Sent with my Huawei Nova Titanium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think I paid € 230 for a new one. (without keyboard)
The performance is very nice. Battery runs fine for about 4-6 hours. (Watching movies, Surfing, installing, updating ... )
But I think with keyboard 180 it is not too bad. I do not know any tablet for € 250 that is faster.
peterl30 said:
I think I paid € 230 for a new one. (without keyboard)
The performance is very nice. Battery runs fine for about 4-6 hours. (Watching movies, Surfing, installing, updating ... )
But I think with keyboard 180 it is not too bad. I do not know any tablet for € 250 that is faster.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As alternative I've found a surface pro 3 (4/128) that I think could be more reliable
Sent with my Huawei Nova Titanium

What the ULTIMATE Phablet needs? ZenFone 3 Ultra-Perhaps the Beginning?

Here is my take on what the ultimate phablet needs. I think the current featureset of the ASUS ZenFone 3 Ultra is a really good start. I hope either Huawei, Samsung or Asus or even Sony or HTC will pay attention to the thoughts expressed here.
Here are the hings that the Zenfone 3 Ultra lacks to be the ultimate phablet and I hope that ASUS or another brand will add to the next revision of their Phablets without sacrificing the existing feaures of the ZenFone 3 Ultra:
-Snapdragon 820 SOC
-Full Dual Sim+ MicroSd slot
-Inbuilt Stylus Pen Input-similar to Note series
-Front Facing (Left+Right) Dual 5 Magnet Speakers not like now all at the bottom
-IR Blaster (no just IR focus)
-NFC
-256GB ROM
-Magnetic QWERTY Low Profile Full Keyboard that can be used as cover or as on demand accessory with space for keeping the phone in a standing position whilst typing-For an experience like the good old days of the Nokia Communicators that I loved.
-2K/4K Display without reducing the size-in fact without even increasing the size of the device even 7.5" displays are possible on such devices-Galaxy Note 1 started it why not try to challenge the perceptions once again?
-Dual Camera setup with 3D and VR Compatibility-why did this feature die on mobiles when at one point it was becoming a trend.
And of the current generation of phablet producers, no brand realises the true potential of such devices, and none have been able to provide the ultimate feature set on such a device. Every device be it from Huawei or from Asus have always been hit and miss.
AWFRONT said:
-Front Facing (Left+Right) Dual 5 Magnet Speakers not like now all at the bottom
-IR Blaster (no just IR focus)
-Dual Camera setup with 3D and VR Compatibility-why did this feature die on mobiles when at one point it was becoming a trend.
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I would be happy if they add at least this. By the way, I've had a Nokia Communicator earlier too.
Z3Ultra ordered and on the way...
Try the Honor Note 8, im verry happy with it, the screen is so nice
I'd just be happy if it supported LTE in the US
Of the OP's list these are my two big ones along with working LTE bands for the US
-Full Dual Sim+ MicroSd slot
-IR Blaster

Question [TB132FU] Third party stylus pen for Lenovo Xiaoxin Pad Pro 2022?

Any recomendation on third-party stylus pen for Lenovo Xiaoxin Pad Pro 2022 [TB132FU]?
Fototakas said:
Any recomendation on third-party stylus pen for Lenovo Xiaoxin Pad Pro 2022 [TB132FU]?
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Unluckily there is no third-party stylus pen yet. I asked many sellers, and they told me the Precision Pen 3 is new, so it just takes time to copy the technique. Or you can try some universal pen, but it works like sh!t.
I asked Lazarite if their M pen supports the Lenovo Tab P11 Pro Gen 2 and they said:
Thanks for your interest in our products.
Yes,
Because Lenovo Tab P11 Pro Gen 2 is built-in AES2.0 protocol.
So, M pen is compatible with Lenovo Tab P11 Pro Gen 2.
Sincerely
Terry
LAZARITE Service Team
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I still ended up buying the original Precision Pen 3 because they don't ship in my country so I can't 100% confirm this.
my97 said:
I asked Lazarite if their M pen supports the Lenovo Tab P11 Pro Gen 2 and they said:
I still ended up buying the original Precision Pen 3 because they don't ship in my country so I can't 100% confirm this.
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Don't think it is correct, AES2.0 is also supported by Lenovo Precission 2 pen, but according to Lenovo only Precission 3 is suported.
Maybe sombody know detailed Precission 3 pen specification, with what protocols it works?
Fototakas said:
Don't think it is correct, AES2.0 is also supported by Lenovo Precission 2 pen, but according to Lenovo only only Precission 3 is suported.
Maybe sombody know detailed Precission 3 pen specification, with what protocols it works?
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I actually tested the Precision Pen 2 on my tb132fu and it worked
my97 said:
I actually tested the Precision Pen 2 on my tb132fu and it worked
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That's interesting. If you have both pens, can you compare how they works on tb132fu?
Fototakas said:
That's interesting. If you have both pens, can you compare how they works on tb132fu?
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The PP2 wasn't mine. A friend was frustrated on how laggy it was on their Lenovo M10 so they tested on my tablet and it worked fine, it was smooth and everything. Didn't test tilt and pressure sensitivity so I can't be 100% sure that they work properly.
My bet is that the PP3 is just a wireless charging version of the PP2 under the hood.
Unfortunately they returned it because it was unusable on their tablet.
Can anybody get the Surface pen (or any MPP2.0 pen) to work on the TB132FU? I can pair it, but it doesn't work.
From what I have read, the PP3 is an MPP2.0 pen and theoretically any MPP2.0 pen should work. But due to a recent Lenovo update, no other MPP2.0 pen (i.e not even the PP2) will work anymore. Only the PP3.
Really pisses me off when they do this type of crap.
jpapadami said:
Can anybody get the Surface pen (or any MPP2.0 pen) to work on the TB132FU? I can pair it, but it doesn't work.
From what I have read, the PP3 is an MPP2.0 pen and theoretically any MPP2.0 pen should work. But due to a recent Lenovo update, no other MPP2.0 pen (i.e not even the PP2) will work anymore. Only the PP3.
Really pisses me off when they do this type of crap.
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Do you know which Update did this?
Hanswurstistda said:
Do you know which Update did this?
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Unfortunately no. I am trying to find a repository with official global roms where I can test it out but no luck.
For sure it doesn't work on TB132FU_S000094_221117_ROW but can't say prior to this release what version it worked on.

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