Hi,
First of all..to you moderator's out there, I just wanted to say THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ALL OF YOUR TIME AND EFFORT'S SHOWN IN HELPING USER'S HERE IN THE FORUM'S !! Back in November of 2013..I purchased this:
ASUS Transformer Book T100 Convertible Notebook Tablet, Specs & More
This is actually my first windows touchscreen tablet, my question is..is there anyway to adjust the 'sensitivity' of the touchscreen ? This tablet has a 10.1 " screen, so when I'm trying to use the touchscreen aspect of my tablet I use a capacitive stylus instead of my fingertip. I've performed the 'calibration' function installed on my tablet, but there doesn't seem to be any adjustment included for the amount of 'touch pressure' that's needed when either using a stylus or my finger. Has anyone else encountered this issue, and if so..how did / if were you able to correct it ?
Thanks for any advice / help offered .
Happy New Year !!
David :huh:
First of all..to you moderator's out there, I just wanted to say THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ALL OF YOUR TIME AND EFFORT'S SHOWN IN HELPING USER'S HERE IN THE FORUM'S !! Back in November of 2013..I purchased this:
ASUS Transformer Book T100 Convertible Notebook Tablet, Specs & More
This is actually my first windows touchscreen tablet, my question is..is there anyway to adjust the 'sensitivity' of the touchscreen ? This tablet has a 10.1 " screen, so when I'm trying to use the touchscreen aspect of my tablet I use a capacitive stylus instead of my fingertip. I've performed the 'calibration' function installed on my tablet, but there doesn't seem to be any adjustment included for the amount of 'touch pressure' that's needed when either using a stylus or my finger. Has anyone else encountered this issue, and if so..how did / if were you able to correct it ?
Thanks for any advice / help offered .
Happy New Year !!
David :huh:
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 8.1 Pro
- Computer type
- Laptop
- System Manufacturer/Model
- Toshiba / Satellite L505D-S5965
- CPU
- AMD Athlon Dual Core QL-65
- Memory
- 3GB SDRAM