I bought 2 of these to work side by side and they work as advertised. The screens fold to make it easier to draw or write items. The answer to that is exactly what you're hoping for. They're not as "thin" as my Surface laptop's screen when drawing - they don't have the same precision as on my Surface and Lenovo Thinkpad. These ViewSonics are good for touch buttons and some of the cruder drawing (drawing big blocks in OneNote, etc.). I chose the Viewsonic TD2455 over the Dell and Lenovo monitors because the Viewsonic came with on-screen crayons (you can easily find these at Revain) and they also came with all the cables you need to connect ( Display Port and USB cable). Additionally, these monitors support daisy chaining of DisplayPort cables (helps a little in the cable management category). These monitors also have USB ports on the left side of each monitor, which is useful when you need to charge or connect something quickly. If you have 2, you need to tell Windows 11 which monitor is for the touchscreen so the touch is relative to the right monitor. Control Panel (browse by Category) --> Hardware and Sound --> Tablet PC Settings --> Settings. It took me some time to figure that out. In addition, there is a "Color Calibration" section and another "Calibration" section to determine the position of the screen edges. I didn't think it was necessary, but did it at the request of tech support. What I learned is that they were well matched from the start. In Windows 11, the calibration isn't where the tech support folks told me. It was actually in the Control Panel (browse by Category) --> Hardware and Sound --> Tablet PC Settings --> Calibration (choose the correct monitor). Big note: I was going to ship these monitors back in 1 day. because touchscreens were only enabled 50% of the time after boot. I had to unplug and plug the display back in for the touchscreen to work after each boot. This happened on both touchscreens, so the issue isn't with the screen or the cable. After a month of emailing US tech support, we found that the solution was to use the old USB 2.0 ports instead of the newer USB 3.2 ports. After moving both monitors to USB ports to USB 2.0, the touch screens work 100% of the time. This is on a brand new Dell XPS 8950. Also of note, most of the 1 month delay was due to not being at the monitor every day trying out the scripts - mostly due to my own delays, not tech support by ViewSonic. All in all it works as hoped and we're glad we bought it! Now I press the [Send] button on the touchscreen :)
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