

Thankfully though, the AUR version seems to properly install the driver as an application. It says something about QT path not set blah blah blah. Though the AUR version breaks my Kvantum theme. This is the same driver as the one in the AUR.

From the looks of it, the driver is only enabled when the the. The standard driver does not install a new program. On the XPPEN Website, they provide 2 drivers for linux. The weird thing here is that this driver is nowhere to be found on the XP-PEN website. We will call this driver the “New UI Driver” sh installer and uninstaller.įrom the UI, this looks like the newly redesigned UI. They game me a link to a gDrive archive of the XP-Pen tablet driver. If anyone has answers to this question, I would love to hear them! I seriously do not want to spend the high price of the Wacom Tablet.Įdit: XPPEN finally replyed and sat that the Linux drivers have most if not all of the windows drivers features. I’ve sent an email to XPPEN but they haven’t responded yet. I can’t seem to find any relevant information about these questions on the web. What I want to know is that do the included drivers have support for custom key bindings for the buttons and dials these tablets come with?Īre there any feature omissions they have compared to the Linux Wacom Project, which has full control over the tablet?įinally, does the wireless bluetooth mode for the Deco 03 work on Linux? The tablets I am considering are the XPPEN Deco, Pro Medium, Deco 03, the Deco 02V2, and if non of those have proper driver support, the Wacom Intuous Pro(37USD WTF). Now that I’m finally graduating highschool, I thought it would be time to upgrade my 7 year old Wacom Bamboo tablet.
