No idea if either suggestion will help, but it's all I've got. Initially made for Linux as part of the KDE and included in Calligra Suite, the first stable version for Windows was launched in May 2014 and offers all the power. Sorry my explanations aren't more precise, I use Windows rarely so I'm just going off memory here. Krita is a program focused mainly on digital painting, although you can also use it to retouch photos or even edit vector images.
I also had another (non-wacom) device that exhibited similar behaviour unless I turned off something (I can't remember what it was called, maybe "Windows Ink"?) in the driver's settings, so that might be something else to look for and test. With the Tablet PC Components turned on, some programs worked and others didn't. I had to turn off the "Tablet PC Components" in 7 to get pressure working correctly with Wacom's drivers.
#Krita update 3.0.1.1 software#
Chocolatey is trusted by businesses to manage software deployments. Chocolatey integrates w/SCCM, Puppet, Chef, etc. I searched online and this page looks like what I'm talking about. Krita is a free and open source cross-platform application that offers an end-to-end solution for creating digital art files from scratch built on the KDE and Qt frameworks. Chocolatey is software management automation for Windows that wraps installers, executables, zips, and scripts into compiled packages.
#Krita update 3.0.1.1 drivers#
It's been years since I had to deal with setting up a pressure-sensitive device in Windows, so this might be completely irrelevant now, but in 7 and 8 (possibly 10, too) there was often conflict between Wacom's drivers and some built-in Windows component that tried to provide the same feature.