These can range from drawing apps like ArtFlow or Medibang to Microsoft’s own OneNote pictured above. What’s coming is support for styluses like N-Trig’s and Wacom’s, including detection for pressure sensitivity, at least for apps that support. Windows 10’s Your Phone already has the functionality to mirror the phone’s screen on the desktop and interact with it using the usual keyboard, mouse, and touch. This feature practically turns that Windows computer into something like a wireless Wacom drawing tablet for your Android phone. Microsoft Principal Program Manager Lead Analy Otero Diaz revealed on Twitter a feature that is rolling out to the Your Phone app for Windows Insiders. Now there’s a third way but a potentially more expensive way unless you already have a Surface device or similar 2-in-1 computers. The only way to have that would be to buy a Galaxy Note or Galaxy Tab or, more recently, connect a drawing tablet like those from Wacom or Huion. These aren’t just the normal plastic or rubber sticks you’d buy for $5 or so but ones with nontrivial hardware for detecting precise movement, pressure, and even tilt. One of the factors that probably hold Android back in terms of becoming an OS that artists can use, in comparison to iPadOS, is the lack of devices that have support for active styluses.
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