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kain_kusanagi said:
Trunkin said:
Marucha said:
Trunkin said:


Thanks for all the info(and the compliments :D). I think I'd mostly be using the tablet for short sessions, like practicing unfamiliar techniques, doodling poses, and drawing simple cartoons. I think it should be enough for that. Now if I could only find one for under $300. :P

Oh, and I'm a big fan of Hogarth! Although I haven't read that many artbooks, but I find the way he teaches to be very straightforward and to the point, and, like you said, they are good for memorizing parts, which I have a particularly difficult time with. Plus, I just love staring at his sketches. 


They are releasiing an 8-inch model soon. Maybe that will be in your pricepoint. The CPU is supposedly a wee bit higher... google galaxy note 8 inch, youll see pictures/news on it

I can't believe I didn't hear about this earlier. I thought I was on top of this stuff! I find 9in. tablets to be the perfect size, but 8 inches is pretty respectable too, and since it'll be using a standard TFT LCD screen, I'm guessing Samsung is aiming for $300 or less. I'm crossing my fingers for $250 for the 16gb Wifi model, though.


I hope it works out for you. I personly prefer tablets as big as I can get them. If I need something small I go with a phone, and if I want to bring a tab along I'd want something as close the size of a laptop. That's why I'm so interested in the new move by MS and even Android Tab makers to include an attachable keyboard. It's the best of both worlds. Although I haven't played with one yet, I would imagine that a Windows 8 tablet with Photoshop, Corel Painter, etc. would be as good as it gets. If pressure sensitivity was included. I guess the bonus with that is you could always bring your Wacom along and have a touch screen tablet for quick access to buttons and the Wacom tablet for drawing.

I've heard of a pretty good Lenova pressure sensitive touch screen laptop, but since I'm not in the market for a laptop I haven't looked into it.

I've held 10.1 inch tablets before, and I dunno. Maybe my wrists are just weak, but it feels a bit wonky holding them in one hand. Sony's Xperia Tablet S, on the other hand, feels just right. I think 8 inches is as small as I'm willing to go, though; 7 is just too small. I  usually sketch on pretty small peices of paper anyway, so it shouldn't be too much of a problem.

I know what you mean about attachable keyboards. The Transformer Prime/Infinity was on my radar for a while for that very reason, and after playing around with one in my local Fry's, it seems even more appealing. Not only that, but someone has managed to get Ubuntu running on that thing! Unfortunately, not many transforming tablets also have stylus support. Lenovo's Wacom Penabled tablet PCs would be ideal, but I don't think make those anymore. I know the knewest HP Elitebook supports a pen, but I'm not sure if it's pressure sensitive. The Surface Pro's pen is pressure sensitive, though, but that has some funky touchpad flap instead of a true keyboard. Either way, those are all too expensive for me. I am currently in desperate need of a replacement for my laptop, but I could most likely build a respectable desktop and buy a Galaxy Note 8 for under $999, so I'd rather go that route. Surface is one sexy device, though, and, with a few interface tweaks, Photoshop on that thing would be bliss...