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A stylus (pl.: styli or styluses[1]) is a writing utensil or a small tool for some other form of marking or shaping, for example, in pottery. It can also be a computer accessory that is used to assist in navigating or providing more precision when using touchscreens. It usually refers to a narrow elongated staff, similar to a modern ballpoint pen. Many styluses are heavily curved to be held more easily. Another widely used writing tool is the stylus used by blind users in conjunction with the slate for punching out the dots in Braille.[2]

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The English word stylus has two plurals: styli and styluses.[3] The original Latin word was spelled stilus; the spelling stylus arose from an erroneous connection with Greek στυλος (stylos), 'pillar'.[4]

The Latin word had several meanings, including "a long, sharply pointed piece of metal; the stem of a plant; a pointed instrument for incising letters; the stylus (as used in literary composition), 'pen'".[4] The last meaning is the origin of style in the literary sense. The Latin word is probably derived from the Indo-European root *stei- 'to prick', also found in the words stimulus 'a goad, stimulus' and instigare 'to incite, instigate'.[5]

Styluses were first used by the ancient Mesopotamians in order to write in cuneiform. They were mostly made of reeds and had a slightly curved trapezoidal section.[6][7][8] Egyptians (Middle Kingdom) and the Minoans of Crete (Linear A and Cretan Hieroglyphic) made styluses in various materials: reeds that grew on the sides of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and in marshes and down to Egypt where the Egyptians used styluses from sliced reeds with sharp points; bone and metal styluses were also used. Cuneiform was entirely based on the "wedge-shaped" mark that the end of a cut reed made when pushed into a clay tablet; from Latin cuneus 'wedge'. The linear writings of Crete in the first half of the second millennium BC which were made on clay tablets that were left to dry in the sun until they became "leather" hard before being incised by the stylus. The linear nature of the writing was also dictated by the use of the stylus.

In Western Europe styluses were widely used until the late Middle Ages. For learning purposes the stylus was gradually replaced by a writing slate. From the mid-14th century improved water-powered paper mills produced large and cheap quantities of paper and the wax tablet and stylus disappeared completely from daily life.

Modern day devices, such as phones, can often be used with a stylus to accurately navigate through menus, send messages etc. Today, the term stylus often refers to an input tool usually used with touchscreen-enabled devices, such as Tablet PCs, to accurately navigate interface elements, send messages, etc. This also prevents smearing the screen with oils from one's fingers. Styluses may also be used for handwriting, or for drawing using graphics tablets.

A passive or capacitive stylus is a stylus that acts just like a finger when touching a device screen. There is no electronic communication between a passive stylus and a device, and the device treats the stylus the same as a finger. Passive styluses are considered less accurate than active styluses.

An active stylus includes electronic components that communicate with a device's touchscreen controller, or digitizer. Active pens are typically used for note taking, on-screen drawing/painting, and electronic document annotation. They help prevent the problem of one's fingers or hands accidentally contacting the screen.

Since many modern tablets make use of multi-touch recognition, some stylus and app manufactures have created palm rejection technologies into their products. This works to turn off the multi-touch feature allowing the palm to rest on the tablet while still recognizing the stylus.

Other than the types above, a haptic stylus is a stylus that simulates, through haptic technology, realistic physical sensations which can be felt while writing on paper. The sensation is sometimes enhanced by the combination of auditory and tactile illusions, such as with RealPen.[9]

A stylus is also an instrument used to scribe a recording into smoked foil or glass. In various scientific instruments this method may be employed instead of a pen for recording as it has the advantage of being able to operate over a wide temperature range, does not clog or dry prematurely, and has nearly negligible friction in comparison to other methods. These characteristics were useful in certain types of early seismographs and in recording barographs that were once used to verify sailplane records. The styluses used in scanning tunneling microscopes have only a single atom at the tip; these are effectively the sharpest styluses possible.

If you tired of the same old look of your web and to give it a new and stylish look, stylus add-on is the ideal one for you. It is the best add-on of its kind, which you can restyle your web. This add-on was created with the aim to make it provide the users an easy interface to make their browser more stylish and pleasant to look at.

Bruker's Dektak stylus profilers are the culmination of over five decades of proprietary technology advances. They provide repeatable, reliable, and accurate measurements- from traditional step height measurements and 2D roughness surface characterization to advanced 3D mapping and film stress analyses. Dektak surface profilers have been widely accepted as the gold standard for measuring thin film thickness, stress, surface roughness and form in diverse applications areas from academic research to semiconductor process control.

Nick Guy has been using and reviewing iPad styluses for a decade, first using the early Ten One Pogo stylus when working in Apple retail and then covering dozens more as an accessories editor and author of several iterations of this guide.

For previous versions of this guide, we interviewed graphic designer Dan Bransfield, and designer Mike West helped us test styluses. For the more recent updates, we did speed, handwriting, and precision tests. Writer Serenity Caldwell interviewed pixel artist Rich Stevens, cartoonist Danielle Corsetto, and illustrator Mike Thompson, who have decades of collective experience working in print and online, and asked them to personally test our top picks.

An iPad stylus makes it easier to draw, sketch, doodle, write notes, and use devices in cold weather, and it can help some people who have certain mobility issues that might make touchscreen navigation difficult.

Adonit has long been hailed in the iPad stylus universe for great designs that feel good in the hand, and the Mark is no exception. The curved, triangular design brings to mind grade-school pencils or charcoal sticks, with slanted sides that converge into a cone nose that cradles a 6 mm mesh nib. This cone-shaped nose will be welcome to anyone who places their fingers close to the nib when writing or drawing.

Longtime tablet leader Wacom has been making rubber and Bluetooth styluses for the iPad for a few years, but 2016 saw the company change to mesh nibs for its standout models, the Bamboo Solo and Bamboo Duo (the latter of which includes a traditional pen nib in addition to a digital stylus tip). Those mesh nibs feel flimsy and have way too much squish when you draw on the screen, and the weight balance of both styluses has changed, too, which left us thoroughly unimpressed.

The stylus is the contact point of the machine with the component to be measured. It deflects the measurement data acquisition in the probe. The size and design of the stylus used is determined by the characteristic to be measured. Key parameters for styli are accuracy, rigidity and service life, which are primarily determined by the materials used and the manufacturing technology.The quality of the stylus is a decisive factor in the quality of the measuring result. The stylus service life is primarily determined by the type of shaft processing and the quality of the connection between the stylus tip and the shaft. High-end production processes and technologies make ZEISS the technology leader in the industry.

ZEISS styli are available in various versions. A large portfolio of standard styli for M2, M3, M3XXT or M5 threads is available. Different stylus tips made of different materials and different shaft designs can be purchased for these styli. Furthermore, there are also non-threaded styli and special styli for form, contour and surface measurements.

The shaft material used and the shaft cross-section have the greatest influence on the stylus rigidity. For standard styli, ZEISS uses shafts made of a high-strength carbide. These represent a good compromise in terms of weight, deflection and thermal linear expansion. Styli with ThermoFit shafts are particularly light, stiff and have only a small linear expansion under the influence of heat. They are therefore particularly suitable for applications in the M3XXT range and for long styli with a large shaft thickness. ZEISS is the only supplier to use a high-strength Grade 5 titanium alloy for the adapters. This gives the adapters high rigidity and makes them significantly lighter than steel adapters and also makes them anti-magnetic and corrosion-resistant.

Usually a sphere is used as the stylus element. This sphere can be made of different materials and is suitable for different applications depending on the material. The standard are ruby spheres, but in combination with continuous scanning they can wear out or apply material to some surfaces. An alternative is silicon nitride, which has less material application when scanning aluminum, for example. Diamond coated or solid diamond spheres are especially suitable for scanning hard surfaces or soft aluminum alloys. Even sharp edges or single point scans with high load can be reliably performed. They have a very long durability, as they do not wear out and do not raise material.Depending on the material of the stylus and the workpiece, wear or material deposits may occur. Therefore, check your styli regularly and remember to clean them with ZEISS stylus cleaning cloths or replace them if necessary. Would you like to know more about ZEISS styli? Then book our free stylus eLearning on the ZEISS eLearning platform.

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