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![]() ![]() This is a complete guess, but we’ll keep you posted as we learn more. The one has a lot of the standard stuff like palm detection, and. It’s super annoying, but if Adaptive Hold detects that you’re “holding” your hand on the screen across a larger surface area (your palm instead of your finger) and for a longer period of time, perhaps it can quickly adapt to ignore the shelf while you draw or write. Noteshelf is another popular note taking application with handwriting support built right in. The main problem with the current setup is that placing your palm across the device pulls up your shelf and causes you to open other apps. In regards to the Adaptive Hold flag and feature, it’s currently unclear as to what that’s referring to, but if I had to guess, I would say it’s probably in reference to the detection of your palm across the bottom of the screen so that the OS knows you’re not attempting to activate the shelf with your finger swipe gesture. Right now, it’s been tested on the Samsung Chromebook V2, a popular device for notetaking as it comes with a built-in stylus, but it’s obviously going to become available to many more devices as it develops. Chrome://flags#enable-neural-palm-rejection-model-v2Ĭhrome://flags#enable-neural-palm-adaptive-hold Chromium Gerritįound on Chrome OS 99 via the Dev channel, these two flags currently do nothing notable, but they will presumably provide “a new version of neural palm modern (v2)” so that users can get something like a 50% reduction to the overall latency of palm rejection, according to the code change. ![]()
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