Testseek.com have collected 42 expert reviews of the Wacom PTH-650 Intuos5 Medium and the average rating is 89%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Wacom PTH-650 Intuos5 Medium.
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Published: 2012-05-21, Author: Jeff , review by: examiner.com
Abstract: Ease of Use, Performance: 24/25Look & Feel: 22/25Features 23/25How much I enjoy 24/25Total: 93/100Wacom Intuos5 includes some great features and tis release also brings touch gestures along with the included pen as well as the ability to expand with other...
Still the best tablet on the market and a must-have for designers and artists.
Gestures are different from Lion’s default gestures.
The Intuos5 is another great product from the kings of the tablet market. Except for a few weird gestures that don’t match up with Lion, the touch gesture features are a great addition. Product Intuos5 Company Wacom Contact wacom.com Price $229 s...
Abstract: If you use a product like Adobe Photoshop, or Corel Painter, and you are not using a pen tablet, then you don't really understand what you are missing. A pen tablet allows you much more control than you can get with a mouse. It gives you much more effi...
Beautifully textured drawing surface. 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivity. New, programmable capacitive buttons. Available in three sizes. Robust software bundle. Takes special advantage of Photoshop, Lightroom, and Maya.
Pen grip attracts dust and lint. Duo button is still too easy to press. Multitouch gesture accuracy trails that of a good laptop trackpad. Wireless kit is optional
The Wacom Intuos5 drawing tablet is well-designed, comes in multiple sizes, and offers a near-ideal balance of features and accuracy for the price....
Addition of multitouch support makes Wacom's most popular input tablet even more capable. Ambidextrous design with the option to go wireless. New headsup display on the ExpressKeys reminds you of your settings in an instant. All the settings and gestures
Touch features lack the accuracy and responsiveness of the input pen. Coated plastic surface doesn't come close to the feel of glass. Smoothness of gesturebased input is inconsistent
Published: 2012-03-01, Author: Lori , review by: cnet.com
The redesigned Wacom Intuos5 fixes some drawbacks from the already-excellent previous version, plus adds multitouch operation to an already impressive bag of input tricks
There's still no interface for sharing/migrating saved settings or allowing third parties to provide preconfigured application-specific settings. Also, the heads-up display trigger is a little too sensitive
Though it doesn't add any new graphics-specific capabilities over its predecessor, the Wacom Intuos5 input tablet remains a must-have for digital brushworkers.
Abstract: With its ergonomic design that is equally useful for left- or right-handed users, the new slim-profile Wacom Intuos5 allows creative professionals to work in a comfortable and intuitive way. New features include multi-touch gesture support, wireless c...
Abstract: Chances are if you own a graphics tablet, you refer to it as a Wacom (pronounced wah-com) for the simple fact that, other than a couple of small players, Wacom basically dominates the market. That and the company's tablet technology is superb. Up unt...
Touch and pen interface; ExpressKeys HUD is useful and unintrusive; all tablet sizes feature wireless option; new design
No Bluetooth model, Small $265; Medium $400; Large $550
The Intuos5 feels like Wacom’s first major attempt to recreate the experience of working with canvas. It’s possible to gesture when necessary, draw when not and work more gracefully without keyboards and extra accessories. We can’t wait to see how Waco...