• conciselyverbose
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      3811 months ago

      It depends.

      You can basically always use the crappy ones made for general touchscreens to replicate your finger. You can’t use a real one with features like Apple Pencil/surface pen/wacom without an extra layer built into the screen to recognize them.

      • @socsa@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        FWIW, my daily driver is a Lenovo Yoga with Ubuntu and the active pen works just fine with that. That support is definitely there.

        • @teruma@lemmy.world
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          1210 months ago

          Sure, because the Yoga has the extra screen layer to support active pens. Linux isn’t the problem.

    • GreenBottles
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      611 months ago

      it wouldn’t be hard at all you just buy a stylus that works like a finger

      • @twolate@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2711 months ago

        With the catch that it works like a finger meaning fat and imprecise. A stylus like the surface has is more like a pen and needs hardware in the tablet to function.

        • Tippon
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          411 months ago

          Not really. I’ve got a cheap stylus for my phone that acts like a pen, down to drawing fine lines too. It can’t adjust the thickness of the line based on pressure, like my Wacom pad and pen for the PC, but for most things it works brilliantly :)

        • Dandroid
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          211 months ago

          Did you ever use the Nvidia Shield Tablet stylus? It was a very thin and precise passive stylus that worked on any touch screen. It was pretty nice. They probably only sold a handful of them, so there was no gen 2. I happen to know someone who was working on that project, so they let me play with it.