- I am worry that doing so will make the system NOT taking my calibration that I did as the active one.
- If doing so is just for enabling "Reset Calibration" data, then I find deleting the Registry keys the better cleaner way to make sure that all old entries are gone.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Oh, and one more thing ... about my EeeSlate Digitizer hacking journey....
(Follow up to my last post about fixing EeeSlate digitizer problem) I saw some posts mentioning about changing the system registry key from "LinearityData" to "UserLinearityData". I didn't do it because:
Seemed to have digitizer and Bluetooth keyboard/mouse problem resolved
One thing that make me capable to resolve problem is my stubbornness. When I found something that irritates me, I will try and try and try until I ultimately give up the problem (because I already wasted way too much time) or get the problem resolved. This time, I thing I accomplished the later.
So I continue to use my second day of my long weekend to deal with one that kept irritating me: EeeSlate 121. I mean, the specification of this device is not great, but it should be good enough as daily use tablet and laptop, but as I mentioned in my last blog, there were 2 things that kept irritating me:
So I continue to use my second day of my long weekend to deal with one that kept irritating me: EeeSlate 121. I mean, the specification of this device is not great, but it should be good enough as daily use tablet and laptop, but as I mentioned in my last blog, there were 2 things that kept irritating me:
- Bluetooth keyboard and mouse discounted to work all the sudden.
- Inaccurate digitizer.
The bluetooth problem seemed to be solved when I realized that, under Bluetooth Settings, the following items are ON:
- Allow bluetooth devices to send you PIM items such a business cards ...
- Allow remote device to browse, send and recieve pictures, music ...
After I turned the above 2 items OFF, the lost bluetooth connection suddenly comes back. And both the keyboard and mouse were working fine since then.
As for digitizer, it turns out the trick of increasing recognition point DOES work. I proved that by intentionally did a horrible job on setting those track points, and sure enough the digitizer went nuts.
So here's the procedure I used to make digitizer working resonably well (there are still some spots on the screen that didn't get perfectly right, but I am a bit lazy and those spot didn't affect my work, so I let them slide and maybe re-calibrated later.)
- To clean up all the previous setting
- Make sure all the related entries in the system registry are gone.
- Use Regedit, and then find "Linearity". You should be able to find 2 pairs of tries:
- One under the key "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\TabletPC\LinearityData" (and a corresponding "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Control\TabletPC\LinearityData")
- One under something similar to "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Enum\HID\VID_056A&PID_0090&Col02\7&1ae9605e&0&0001\Device Parameters" (and a corresponding "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Enum\HID\VID_056A&PID_0090&Col02\7&1ae9605e&0&0001\Device Parameters", with a name "LinearityData".) (the "VID_056A&PID_0090&Col02\7&1ae9605e&0&0001" part may not be exactly the same.
- To clean up all up the setting, you need to delete :
- "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\TabletPC\LinearityData" the entry.
- Delete JUST THE ENTRY of "LinearityData" under "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Enum\HID\VID_056A&PID_0090&Col02\7&1ae9605e&0&0001\Device Parameters". Do not delete the whole "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Enum\HID\VID_056A&PID_0090&Col02\7&1ae9605e&0&0001\Device Parameters" key,
- After deleted these CurrentControlSet entries, the ones under "ControlSet001" will automatically got deleted.
- You need to delete these Regedit entries when:
- You need to do the hack re-calibration again.
- You need to do the NORMAL re-calibration and thus need to "RESET" the old calibration data. You WILL NOT able to cleanly RESET (by clicking the reset button in the control panel re-calibration property screen) unless these system registry entries are gone.
- To do the hack reclibration properly (at least on Asus EeeSlate EP-121:
- Open Command Line and run this command "tabcal devicekind=pen lincal novalidate XGridPts=5,15,30,50,70,90,120,259,400,513,600,767,900,1021,1180,1210,1240,1260,1275 YGridPts=5,15,50,100,163,223,321,479,640,740,760,780,795" . Some older post about this hack omitted "devicekind=pen" which caused the trouble least on my Windows 8 EeeSlate. Also, if you got syntax error, that is because some spaces are being added by the cut and paste process. Get rid of those spaces and it should be fine.
- The command will trigger a calibration screen with 100+ recognition point. You need to properly set each of them. If you failed, you will need to clean the registry and redo everything again.
- My experience told me that when you redo the calibration, how messy (or how well) you did the last time will affect your process (sometimes gives you hard time by refuse to take your new one because the new one seemed too far off from the old one). So in that sense, the more do re-calibrate, the smoother the calibration process should be.
So that's it. I wasted enough time on this mess. But at least I got a reasonable good result at the end, and now I no longer have incentive to buy Surface Pro, which is good.
Continue to battle with Asus Eee Slate (EP121)
After reading a few forum post, I reignited my passion on fixing a few problems that I had with my Eee Slate so far, including:
- Bluetooth keyboard and mouse frequently got dropped for no good reason.
- Not able to join Homegroup
- Stylus not calibrated properly.
At least I got the homegroup problem fixed by installing the wireless driver Version Version V10.0.0.110 . THis is the latest one (2012.10.30 update),
And then I installed the bluetooth driver Version V8.0.0.206. Again, it's the 2012-10-30 update, which seems to be the best I can get. I am now using my bluetooth keyboard and mouse. It;s see if it can survive for the rest of the day without dropping.
The digitizer problem, though, is still not fixed. I tried the hack mentioned here. At the end I give up, which kind of once again prompt me to think about buying another machine. Damn it, I just so frequently wanted to spend spend spend.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Upgraded Eee Slate EP121 BIOS, still lame
I started putting company document on my Eee Slate 121, and thought that I should start taking security on my tablet seriously and tried to install BitLocker. I then realized that BitLocker did not turn on on my machine. Futher looked into it and I found that I need to turn on TPL on my BIOS. So I went and checked, and couldn't find the checking. I also realized that my BIOS was not up-to-date. So I was like, first thing first, let me update the BIOS.
Updating BIOS on EeeSlate EP121 is actually pretty straight forward .... if you know how to do it. The problem is that there's no clear instruction on Asus' official web site at all. All you got is the download link. So here's the steps I did:
- Get BIOS file from official ASUS site.
- Extract BIOS file (EP121AS_704.rar to EP121AS.704)
- Put the file in a FAT32 (FAT may also work) thumb drive.
- Connect that thumb drive to EeeSlate.
- Start the machine while holding F2.
- On BIOS screen, select EZ BIOS Utility.
- Navigate to the BIOS first, and start flashing.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Hate on Surface Pro, some love on Sony Duo 11
I got totally fed up by the damn Asus EeeSlate as the Wacom digitizer kept throwing me curve ball. After reading a blog about how drawing with Wacom stylus being such an awesome experience, I headed to a local Windows Store to give Surface Pro a spin.
This is kind of ironic, cause I brought my EeeSlate at the exact same store.
So I tried Surface Pro, and I even tried it with Sketchbook Pro 6.0. At the end, I was pissed, like ultra pissed. Why? Because for every single freaking Surface Pro I tried, they ALL have digitizer problem at the upper left corner. (I tried more than 6 Surface Pro devices) I even convinced a lady at the store to enter the admin code so that I can re-collaborate the screen (by the way, that another dude at the store had some serious attitude problem, which is NOT the user experience you want a flag ship store should deliver). Eventually, I decided to never consider Surface Pro in my life ever again.
To my surprise, I tried Sony Duo 11, and I was pretty pleased by the digitizer It was way way more accurate than my EeeSlate and Surface Pro. I still have my X60T digitize better, but then that was a different technology.
So is Sony Duo 11 a keeper. Hell no! Mainly because of the damn crappy keyboard. Key arrangement is stupid, and I don't understand why they wasted all those space on the keyboard area by making those keys tiny. In fact, I typed most of the blog on that keyboard and it was a horrible experience.
And speaking of horrible experience, I wasn't pleased by my experience in the Microsoft Store. Remember I mentioned a while ago that pissed-off employee who seemed wasn't pleased about being required to enter admin password in order for me to collaborate the digitizer again? I was also not happy about more than one staff member there asking me to take off the thumb drive I brought along. I use it to keep my Sketchbook Pro 6, which is the application that made me consider buying a freaking $1400+ device. I've done it once by following the protocol of buying the device, bring it home, and then try out with my drawing app. What did a got? A shitty Eee Slate that has off-track Wacom digitizer surface. And I got the exact same result after swapping 2 other machines. So I have enough. I will not spend my money unless I know it does exactly what I want. And I thought that is what showroom is for.
Also, they have all sort of not working machines in the show up. All the Asus Taichi machines in the show room had touch screen disabled. I knew that indeed the machines had problem because even the employee there wasn't able to find a Taichi that worked. Microsoft Store is supposed to be a public face of the company, then I can see why so many people still hate Microsoft.
OK, something positive though: I tried out several Windows Phone 8, including the super low end Lumia 520. And I was actually pretty pleased by the performance. They were smooth and very responsive. Of course, there's no complicated apps to stress test the device, but at least, unlike Surface Pro, I had some good experience with them.
By the way, I am not the only one who rant about the digitizer problem on Surface Pro.
This is kind of ironic, cause I brought my EeeSlate at the exact same store.
So I tried Surface Pro, and I even tried it with Sketchbook Pro 6.0. At the end, I was pissed, like ultra pissed. Why? Because for every single freaking Surface Pro I tried, they ALL have digitizer problem at the upper left corner. (I tried more than 6 Surface Pro devices) I even convinced a lady at the store to enter the admin code so that I can re-collaborate the screen (by the way, that another dude at the store had some serious attitude problem, which is NOT the user experience you want a flag ship store should deliver). Eventually, I decided to never consider Surface Pro in my life ever again.
To my surprise, I tried Sony Duo 11, and I was pretty pleased by the digitizer It was way way more accurate than my EeeSlate and Surface Pro. I still have my X60T digitize better, but then that was a different technology.
So is Sony Duo 11 a keeper. Hell no! Mainly because of the damn crappy keyboard. Key arrangement is stupid, and I don't understand why they wasted all those space on the keyboard area by making those keys tiny. In fact, I typed most of the blog on that keyboard and it was a horrible experience.
And speaking of horrible experience, I wasn't pleased by my experience in the Microsoft Store. Remember I mentioned a while ago that pissed-off employee who seemed wasn't pleased about being required to enter admin password in order for me to collaborate the digitizer again? I was also not happy about more than one staff member there asking me to take off the thumb drive I brought along. I use it to keep my Sketchbook Pro 6, which is the application that made me consider buying a freaking $1400+ device. I've done it once by following the protocol of buying the device, bring it home, and then try out with my drawing app. What did a got? A shitty Eee Slate that has off-track Wacom digitizer surface. And I got the exact same result after swapping 2 other machines. So I have enough. I will not spend my money unless I know it does exactly what I want. And I thought that is what showroom is for.
Also, they have all sort of not working machines in the show up. All the Asus Taichi machines in the show room had touch screen disabled. I knew that indeed the machines had problem because even the employee there wasn't able to find a Taichi that worked. Microsoft Store is supposed to be a public face of the company, then I can see why so many people still hate Microsoft.
OK, something positive though: I tried out several Windows Phone 8, including the super low end Lumia 520. And I was actually pretty pleased by the performance. They were smooth and very responsive. Of course, there's no complicated apps to stress test the device, but at least, unlike Surface Pro, I had some good experience with them.
By the way, I am not the only one who rant about the digitizer problem on Surface Pro.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)