Display resolution is irrelevant. The medium has an 8.8' x 5.5' active area according to their specifications. Everymac has 20.3' x 25.6' x 8' as the dimensions for the newest imac, but viewable area would be less than 20.3 x 25. I can't seem to find that.
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Anyway the distance your cursor moves will differ from your hand movement. I always found that irritating when it came to any fine detailing or masking. Your results may vary. Even with a 15' rmbp I would be fine with a large tablet, because the tablet wouldn't exceed the size of the display. Just make sure you have the room to use one comfortably if you decide to go that route. Note that if you set it to work across both displays simultaneously in a tiled manner, it will feel weird no matter what due to the difference in aspect ratio.
If you check 'force proportions' under those circumstances, it will crop the tablet area in use. Click to expand.I'm not various people, but I have been a Wacom tablet user since the ADB port days, about 15 years or so. I'm using a medium-sized tablet on either of my two rMBPs, and use either a 27-inch monitor or 40-inch HDTV as a monitor, and the medium tablet suits me just fine. FWIW, I'm also 6'7' - and I like bigger things as they just make me feel 'normal', but not in a Wacom Tablet! I've also used a medium Wacom tablet with my old 17' Macbook Pro and 27' iMac - no problems. You'll find that you'll adapt very quickly to a medium tablet.
I've also bought a small Intuos for when I travel. The software driver allows for switching between 'mouse mode' and 'Full mode', and per-application settings, and includes a utility to save your preferences. The large tablet is too frickin' large for 99% of what I use it for, some video, some image editing, lots of office work, and some web stuff. I know a guy who bought a large tablet, and then exchanged it for a medium-sized tablet.
I am considering a large Wacom tablet, but it's going to be the new Cintiq. Without the touch option.
Click to expand.You're overthinking your work process IMO, and I do get what you're hoping to accomplish. I've been building bridges and buildings for over 20 years, and can tell the difference between a 19mm bolt head and a 20mm bolt head from distance. For what you're describing, I use the scanning engine in the latest version of Illustrator and an inexpensive scanner. Scan the image (be it a real object or a drawn sketch on graph paper), and use Adobe Illustrator's tracing engine to create a usable (and scaled) object to work with. Wacom's driver does provide a 'full' or '1-to-1' mapping system that is completely independent of the OS, and using a Large or Medium or Small Wacom tablet is NOT going to change the scaling issue you're concerned about.
Wacom tablets are not digitizers, but Wacom has purchased much of the IP of digitizing-related companies that have gone under over the years. And, FWIW, I helped design and build out 3 light rail alignments that are in operation today - with software drivers created by companies whose IP is owned by Wacom. I'm not a huge Wacom fan of late. I really liked the solid Japanese-made tablets made in the early 2000's far better than the creaky Chinese-made stuff for sale offered now.
I've told them that (they're in Vancouver WA, and I'm across the River in Portland OR). And, they do make a large tablet I wouldn't want to be hit over the head with.
Or, work on a daily basis. But, the large tablets are huge - see one for yourself and you'll see what I'm alluding to. You're overthinking your work process IMO, and I do get what you're hoping to accomplish. I've been building bridges and buildings for over 20 years, and can tell the difference between a 19mm bolt head and a 20mm bolt head from distance. For what you're describing, I use the scanning engine in the latest version of Illustrator and an inexpensive scanner.
Scan the image (be it a real object or a drawn sketch on graph paper), and use Adobe Illustrator's tracing engine to create a usable (and scaled) object to work with. Wacom's driver does provide a 'full' or '1-to-1' mapping system that is completely independent of the OS, and using a Large or Medium or Small Wacom tablet is NOT going to change the scaling issue you're concerned about. Wacom tablets are not digitizers, but Wacom has purchased much of the IP of digitizing-related companies that have gone under over the years.
And, FWIW, I helped design and build out 3 light rail alignments that are in operation today - with software drivers created by companies whose IP is owned by Wacom. I'm not a huge Wacom fan of late.
I really liked the solid Japanese-made tablets made in the early 2000's far better than the creaky Chinese-made stuff for sale offered now. I've told them that (they're in Vancouver WA, and I'm across the River in Portland OR). And, they do make a large tablet I wouldn't want to be hit over the head with. Or, work on a daily basis. But, the large tablets are huge - see one for yourself and you'll see what I'm alluding to. Click to expand.Pretty much.
I have used a large tablet off and on for several years, going back to digitizers attached to PCs for CAD/CAM work in the early 90s - they eat up desk space and I always felt I was wasting arm motion and time. I can accomplish more with smaller, precise movements - like flicks of a wrist instead of a wave of my arm, for instance. And, with 'mouse mode', one can get very precise with cursor location and movement. Also, FWIW, I use my tablet with my right hand and a trackpad with my left hand, sandwiched between a keyboard. I've used either a trackpad or mouse with a Wacom tablet for over a decade, and I draft or draw circles (pardon the pun.) around my counterparts - I get the benefit of two input devices, and larger tablet would likely preclude me from being as productive as I am.
I always pack up my medium tablet when I'm hitting the road and use it, only breaking out my small tablet when I'm really limited on space. Good luck with your choice, I'm very happy with mine! Click to expand.Yes, however, there's a yeabutt and YMMV attached.
And, there's no 'only' about AI6 - it's still a sweet piece of software! I've used AI6 but moved to the CC suite. The AI6 scanning engine is basically the same one IMO as the one found in Streamline 4, which I also owned at the time. Adobe overhauled the scanning engine in the latest two CC version, and it's so much faster and more accurate than the engine in AI6 it made my cry the first time I used it. But, yes, no problem - work from a really good scan or drawing and you're in like Flynn.
I have an old Canon MP620 that I use for quick scans and it worked very nicely for AI6 and works as well for AI CC 2014. Click to expand.Sorry, despite the lead-in I thought I was clear. My 'yeah, but' and 'your mileage may vary' is that I'm on the CC platform and you're on CS6. Building on what I wrote and you quoted - about the scanning engine (tracing) is far more powerful in CC 2014 than that in AI6 - faster, more options, better results. I've lived in AI and get lots of client sketches on napkins and notepads - being able to get them in vector form and be able to modify them in AI with my Intuos makes my life much easier, and the new tracing engine gets me out the door a couple of hours early some weeks.
Watching some of my competitors fumble around with a mouse and older software in their offices, and getting shoddy results - I get my jollies sometimes from seeing that. That's all I was getting at.