![]() ![]() On the other hand, let's not forget that the lag goes away if we terminate the driver process. Again there was no answer, and this stands out strikingly in a forum where they read and answer each and every post. I even asked them to confirm at least whether they could replicate the bug or not, as simple as that. They have been ignoring complaints about this issue for months now. Well, maybe they answered something like "delete your prefs" or just generic performance tweaks that have nothing to do with this problem. What about Wacom? What have they said? Nothing. ![]() What you're describing is more of a tablet driver problem. The OS feeds events to Photoshop, and some of them have tablet info, while others don't. I'm sure Wacom staff are also talented people doing their best, but for whatever reason, they (Wacom) have been releasing really really bad and buggy drivers for the last few years, and that's a fact I can't ignore.īut the reason why I think Wacom is more likely to blame, is that Adobe did gave an answer - I don't know if it's the right answer, but they said: " There really isn't a context switch. And, if I were to choose, I would take a Photoshop engineer/programmer over a Wacom one any day. Don't get me wrong, I have also done the same reasoning as you, and yes, I have the feeling that Adobe could fix this, because it's clear that this lag is triggered by something they've changed in the latest versions, as you say.īut it's not too rare that driver developers "cut corners" (or just do wrong things) in their programming, and this weaknesses remain invisible until some program introduces some change or pushes the envelope, and this change triggers the bug in a poorly coded driver. Still, I think more people should be complaining at Wacom's forum as we both have already done.
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