Apple’s iPencil launched to target graphic designers and professional artists
Apple introduced the biggest ever iPad called iPad Pro
with a 12.9 inch display at a media event on Wednesday. The company
also introduced the first Apple Pencil, a new stylus designed for the
iPad Pro for drawing and sketching.
The Apple Pencil is designed to be used with the larger iPad, which
is aimed at professional artists and designers. According to Jonathan
Ive, Apple’s chief design officer, the Pencil will allow a new precision
in drawing on the screen of the iPad, responding to different levels of
pressure and different angles.
With pressure sensors, it can detect how hard you are pushing on the
screen and change the width of the line you draw accordingly. With more
advanced sensors on the tip, it can detect the angle of the pencil
stroke, so it feels more like a real pen.
“Highly responsive sensors built into the tip of the Apple Pencil
work with the iPad Pro display to detect position, force and tilt,” said
Ive in a movie shown as part of Apple’s product presentation yesterday.
“With force data you can press lightly to get a thin stoke or press
harder to get a darker, bolder stroke. Signals emitted from two
locations in the tip calculate the angle and orientation to produce
broad or shaded strokes.”
The technology that reads the touch on the screen has been designed
in a different way to identify the difference between different Pencil
strokes and a finger touch.
“Its unique tip signature allows it to be used simultaneously with
your finger and, with incredibly low latency, it has a responsiveness
that feels like a true writing or drawing instrument,” said Ive. “Apple
Pencil is designed to look and feel like a familiar tool, yet with its
carefully engineered technology, working with our most advanced
multi-touch display, it delivers something extraordinary – precision
that actually gives you the ability to touch a single pixel.”
The top of the Apple Pencil contains sensors that feed information
back to the tablet device. The Apple Pencil can be recharged via an
Apple-standard Lightning cable, which you can apparently plug straight
into the iPad Pro. Apple says the Pencil should last about 12 hours, and
in case of emergencies, 15 seconds of charging can provide about 30
minutes of use. The Apple Pencil is supported by apps like the updated
Notes and Mail, coming in iOS 9. Third party applications will also
support it.
Apple had Microsoft on stage to demonstrate the Apple Pencil working
with Microsoft Office apps running on the iPad Pro. In that demo,
Microsoft showed up how you can use an Apple Pencil for marking up
Office documents and sharing the annotations.
With iOS 9’s multitasking features, Microsoft also showed off using
the Apple Pencil to bring data across apps. With the Apple Pencil,
graphics professionals get an easier, more responsive way to digitally
edit pictures and photos.
The company will be shipping the Apple Pencil in November at a price of $99.
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