Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 11, 2015


In Stock.
Sold by Huion and Fulfilled ipod touch black Friday 2015  by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
  • Active Area: 10'' x 6.25''
  • Pressure Sensitivity: 2048 levels
  • Resolution: 5080 lines per inch; Report Rate: 233 resolutions per second
  • The pen is rechargeable, silmmer and lighter
  • A new version for the H610 model with a clean, edgy new look.

Product Description

Specifications: 
Technology: Electromagnetic Digitizer 
Active Area: 10 x 6.25 '' 
Resolution: 5080 LPI (Line Per Inch) 
Report Rate: 233RPS 
Pen Pressure: 2048 Levels 
Express Keys: 8 
Function Keys: 16 
Reading Height: 0.6'' 
Supply Voltage: DC5V 
Power Consumption: 0.35W 
Interface Support: USB 
USB Cable Length: 1.5M 
OS Support: Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10;Mac OS 10.8 and Mac OS 10.10. or higher 
Dimension: 36 x 24 x 1 cm 
Net Wight: 635g 
Compliance: CE/FCC/CCC 

What's in the Box: 
1. H610PRO Graphics Tablet x 1 
2. Rechargeable jcp black friday 2015 Pen x 1 
3. Rechargeable Wire x 1 
4. USB Wire x 1 
5. User Manual x 1 
6. CD Driver x 1 
7. Pen Holderx 1 (including 4 pcs Pen Tips and 1 piece Pen Tip Remove Tool) 

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 12 x 9.4 x 0.5 inches ; 2.6 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • ASIN: B00GIGGS6A
  • Item model number: H610 Pro
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (585 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
    • #1 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing > Drawing > Drawing Tables & Boards
    • #5 in Computers & Accessories > Computer Accessories > Input Devices > Graphics Tablets
Man, I love this thing so much, it's hard to prove I'm not a shill. Can shills swear? S***-munch. There. I'm no shill.

Seven years back, I bought a Wacom Graphire 4, which was basically my perfect tablet. It was small, easy-to-use, came with a wireless, battery-less mouse, and was built like a Soviet tank. To give you an idea, it's still not dead. Unfortunately, Wacom's help is.
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A year or two ago, I started having terrible luck with drivers. Wacom went crazy and decided all their tablets should have the same driver, and nixed any features that weren't incredibly vague. One of the features that didn't make the cut was my tablet's pen calibration settings. Even better, the driver sucks with Windows 7, and competes with the default driver (which surprisingly sucks more). The only driver that didn't have this problem is a Graphire driver from the XP days, but that's a whole different can of worms.

So I declared my tablet obsolete and shopped for a new Wacom. Turns out, they ALL have similar problems except for the newest Intuos line. That one finally got a good Windows 7/8 driver, but the rest are SOL.

Okay, now onto this tablet. It works BEAUTIFULLY. Despite my concerns, I set it up perfectly the first time, and it's been an absolute dream to use. The surface and pen feel like you're gliding along lightly buttered glass (or nice card-stock for a less weird analogy), and the 8 programmable buttons work as intended. I had two worries with those buttons: 1) I'm left-handed, and didn't want to accidentally trigger them, and 2) for all I knew, they'd be decorative. Not an issue. Haven't even gotten close to accidentally pressing a button. They're very obvious, and too deeply-recessed to push without meaning to. Each one has been easy to program/use, and responds accordingly in both Photoshop and GIMP. I haven't tried doing anything to the 16 programmable hot-cells along the top, but they're off by default, and I suppose they're nice to have.

Oh, and the pen-sensitivity and curve. You can adjust them and test them out in the tablet settings. You can also decide how much of the tablet you want to register (making it a small square instead of a wide rectangle, for instance), and map out where the tablet reaches. I have it set so an inch in on all sides registers as the edge of my monitor. Makes navigating around my drawing programs a little bit more fluid.
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Okay, now a quick tip.

INSTALLING/SETUP:

- Get rid of all other drivers (No Wacom drivers, disable Windows Tablet driver, Pen Flicks, etc.)
- DO NOT plug in tablet until Huion's drivers are completely installed.
- Install drivers from Huiontablet.com/download/
- Restart your PC
- When it restarts, TURN OFF INTERNET. This prevents Windows from accidentally triggering its plug-and-play driver.
- Plug in your tablet. Wait a bit, and you'll see a little tablet icon in the quick-launch bar. That's your tablet driver/settings.
- TURN ON INTERNET.

That's it. It should be working smoothly from then on out.
- The H610 Professional graphics tablet is excellent value for money. While it does suffer some minor software issues, the price is absolutely unbeatable for the overall product quality, and is highly recommended.

Pros:

1. Large array of customization via hotkeys for each individual user, with the "hotkeys" bar labelled 1 - 16, rather than the named functions of the non-pro version.
2. Aesthetically attractive design. The pressable hotkeys have a nice feel to them and the tablet itself isn't too thick (althoguh it is somewhat bulky due to the width: consider desk space before purchase), standing at 13mm (1/2in) at the drawing level. The pen has a pleasing surface to it and isn't heavy at all as there is no AAA battery like the previous iterations.
3. Decent driver support (although this is discussed more below), and works with Windows 8.1.
4. Very cheap considering the alternatives.
5. Performs as expected.

Cons:
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1. Driver support is finicky and no CD is supplied for an external install. The software drivers are built in, although they did not automatically install for me on Windows 8.1, therefore I had to navigate to [...] and download the required drivers from there. This may be exclusive to W8.1, and isn't a big deal either way.
2. The pressure levels are somewhat skewed - you need a fairly hard press to actually achieve the maximum level and this is on the lightest pressure level. The device does pick up the slightest pressure, but the pressure level seems to mimic a curve rather than a linear pattern.
3. The drawing surface isn't as nice as my Wacom Bamboos.

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