It does NOT send digitizer data out via USB and does NOT natively accept video via HDMI. Its an additional monitor for your desktop PC. The Cintiq sends data from its digitizer to your Dekstop PC via USB and accepts video via HDMI.
The Cintiq is a digitizer and screen that is intended to work with your desktop PC. Just wanted to get that out of the way since I think the questions about Miracast have re-directed the discussion. Hi, just to clarify the scenario here, a surface cannot be used in place of a Wacom Cintiq. So please let me know what is going on with the real-world performance in terms of how responsive the screen is and any issues you ran in to you have experienced on the SP4,2017 & SP6 as I am in the market for one but this is a very important feature that seems to be totally sidestepped.
Intel widi miracast pro#
The surface 4 pro doesn't even have a GPU. Finally "It works but it requires the use of the Surface 4 Pro's GPU". "I can't get it to work at all/It's laggy". "It works really well" by a few anonymous people on various forums. My query is how is the performance on this connection using my primary desktops hardware (CPU/GPU/RAM) to work with Photoshop and Zbrush? (Treating the surface pro as a second screen as if its a Wacom Cintiq working with the primary desktops hardware and operating system) I may be a little late to the party on this but I can honestly not get a straight answer via YouTube Reviewers/pre-existing posts.Ĭonnection: Using the Miracast feature via WiFi or wired USB-to-Ethernet adapter.