REVIEW: Wacom Bamboo Stylus for iPad

Features, iPad, iPad accessories, Reviews, Tablet, Tech Digest news
Share

0002_BAMBOO-SYLUS-Angle.ashx.jpg
Name: Bamboo Stylus for iPad (Wacom)

Type: Capacitive touchscreen stylus

Price: £24.99

review-line.JPGEarning your place among the iPad accessory elite in a market already so cluttered is difficult enough, but for touchscreen styluses it’s even harder. With presumably the majority of touchscreen owners equipped with ten fingers that work perfectly fine on capacitive screens, a stylus is a particularly hard sell. Can Wacom’s Bamboo Stylus for iPad prove its worth, or are you better off just using your own stubby digits for ultimate touchscreen control?
review-line.JPG

At first glance, you’d be forgiven for thinking that the Bamboo Stylus was a regular ink pen. Though a tad thicker than your average Bic, the rounded pen measures a standard 4.25 inches long. Built from metal, it’s weighted comfortably, slightly heavier at the end you write with. Like a quality fountain pen, you can twist off and remove the pocket clip from one end, as well as replace the rubber nib at the writing end. All in, it’s well constructed and comfortable to use, and feels far more sturdily built than the majority of throwaway stylus pens available, justifying its slight price premium over the competition in this regard.
0004_BAMBOO-SYLUS-horizontal.ashx.jpg
The nib is of course the most important part of any capacitive touchscreen stylus, and has at times been a tough cookie to crack for manufacturers. Whereas the resistive touchscreens of old relied on pressure and worked well with many pointy, hard stylus shapes, modern capacitive screens work through conduction, letting them respond to the slightest touch from a finger. In the past, capacitive stylus pens have used foam tips to replicate finger inputs, but they’d deform over time and become useless. Most newer styluses instead take the approach of using a hollow, squidgy rubber tip, and so too does the Bamboo Stylus. There’s no magical circuitry going on inside the stylus here, just a rubber tip getting the job done.

The Bamboo Stylus is as accurate a capacitive pen as they come, thanks to a nib that’s smaller than the competition at 6mm (based on a claimed 8mm average from Wacom). You’ll be able to sketch and take handwritten notes with pressure consistent to a regular pen, feeling far more natural than trying to do the same with a greasy finger. As a side note then, using the Bamboo Stylus will keep your screen relatively smudge free, so long as you keep the nib away from any greasy or sticky substances. Artists in particular will appreciate the extra control that using a stylus brings, making sketching using apps such as ArtRage or Doodle Buddy, or handwriting apps like Penultimate, far more consistent to the feel of writing with a pad and paper.
0001_BAMBOO-SYLUS-Pen-Tip.ashx.jpg
It’s a shame then that Wacom couldn’t have made the rubber nib just a tad smaller. Though only the central-most point of the 6mm diameter nib is picked up on the drawing apps, the wide nib can make the finest of details a little difficult to enter. This may be an unavoidable problem, given the iPad needs a certain amount of surface contact to register touch (in line with a finger’s tip) but it’s a niggle nonetheless. Also, though a limitation of the iPad hardware and app software rather than the stylus itself, you’ll notice a delay between inputs and onscreen results with the stylus, which may be off-putting for those used to the instant strokes of pen and paper.

If you’re not an iPad owner, you’ll be happy to hear the Bamboo Stylus should, in theory, work with all capacitive touchscreen devices, be that a HTC smartphone or a Samsung Galaxy tab. The iPad arguably has the most responsive capacitive screen on the market however, so results may vary from display to display.

review-line.JPG

Verdict:

You’ll have to be pretty big on tablet doodling to justify shelling out £25 for a capacitive stylus, but if you are, there are no finer options than Wacom’s Bamboo Stylus for iPad. A well-weighted finger alternative with a responsive nib, you’ll be an iPad Picasso in no time with the stylus. We’d personally like to have seen a smaller tip, which we believe would have lead to even greater accuracy in our hands, but for the most part this will be a point of personal preference, married with the brush/ tip size specifications of the app you’re using. Highly recommended otherwise.

review-line.JPG

4/5

review-line.JPG

Gerald Lynch
For latest tech stories go to TechDigest.tv

8 comments

  • Expensive for what it is, especially when you do not get a free nib with it.  The nib splits on simple use, you probably won’t even notice it at first.  Nice weight of pen though.  Do not expect any help from wacom customer service if you notice the splitting nib issue, it has to be one of the most time wasting, unfriendly, useless customer services I have experienced.  This nib has an issue, it shouldn’t split this way so fast.  Anything over four weeks they won’t replace it, because of their company policy which is not for the customer at all.  Expensive pen for the nib to give up on you just after a month.

  • Expensive for what it is, especially when you do not get a free nib with it.  The nib splits on simple use, you probably won't even notice it at first.  Nice weight of pen though.  Do not expect any help from wacom customer service if you notice the splitting nib issue, it has to be one of the most time wasting, unfriendly, useless customer services I have experienced.  This nib has an issue, it shouldn't split this way so fast.  Anything over four weeks they won't replace it, because of their company policy which is not for the customer at all.  Expensive pen for the nib to give up on you just after a month.

  • I bought the Bamboo Stylus because I do a lot of writing on both iPad and iPhone. I agree with your comments about it – previously I was using the stylus with Penultimate, but I have just discovered ZoomNotes (www.zoom-notes.com) which has an unlimited zoom feature! The stylus works incredibly well with this great app!

  • In today’s tablet PC age, Apple can get succeed, but most of rivals have been always hard to catch up with apple’s step mainly because of a few reasons, including infrastructure, hardware and software, and the combination of rivals meet the status of market in the second. I take time to make the following discuss with a few reasons.

    Apple didn’t invent tablet computer, but make the concept of the tablet computer gained popularity and tablet computer into people’s lives. The most obvious evidence is, after the iPad launched, every manufacturer of tablet PC launched table PC with the similar appearance compared with Apple iPad.

    The fact is, there are many tablet computer manufacturers hope to compete with Apple iPad , but they are no better than the iPad ‘s products. These companies are trying to follow. Apple taken all measures to ensure the tablet market to stay the first position, and the competition situation will also ensure that apple can keep this position.

  • Manufactures roll forming machines in variety of configurations, as well as decoilers and cutoff equipment. Units can be customized to requirements.

  • Substantially, the post is actually the sweetest topic on curing acne naturally. I concur with your conclusions and will thirstily look forward to your future updates. Just saying thanks will not just be sufficient, for the tremendous lucidity in your writing.

  • I recently came across your article and have been reading along. I want to express my admiration of your writing skill and ability to make readers read from the beginning to the end. I would like to read newer posts and to share my thoughts with you.

Comments are closed.