
I've always had Intuos tablets prior to the Bamboo (directly above) - and the latter is just as good for my purposes. Above are photos of some of our Wacom tablets 'through the ages'. My current tablet is a basic A6-sized Wacom Bamboo model that comes with handy customizable buttons on the tablet (which can double as a track pad - you use your finger or the pen) - and the pen has a subtle dual-action customizable button that is controlled with your thumb. Workflow Integration: Automatically catalog all discs burned by Roxio Toast Drag any image directly from NeoFinder into applications like Adobe InDesign, Quark XPress, Apple Pages, Microsoft Office integrate NeoFinder into FileMaker Pro databases, and much more Find it Best Find functions, and of course offline browsing of all your volumes. It'll be more like writing with a normal pen. The trick to using the tablet as a mouse-replacement is to assign a very small area of the tablet as the equivalent screen area - that way you won't be constantly moving your whole hand all over the place. I'm even holding the pen as I type this in - I rarely put it down. True, there's a real learning curve - but once you break through the weirdness barrier, I don't believe you'll look back. When people first use the pen/tablet to control the cursor for everyday computer usage, quite often they can't handle it.



I've been using Wacom Tablets as mouse-alternatives for years - and I can't do without them. Another gadget - and probably the most-used in terms of daily productivity is my Wacom Tablet.
