Since we want to calibrate the touch screen on Windows 10, we’re only concerned with the Display tab. The Tablet PC Settings window will have two tabs if you only have a touch screen however, if you’ve configured an input pen device, it will have three tabs. The quickest way to access the settings is to type Tablet PC Settings in the Windows search bar. If you don’t own a device that has a touch screen or a pen input device, this setting will not be available on your version of Windows 10. The Control Panel has dedicated settings that let you calibrate the touch screen on Windows 10. To fix it, you have to calibrate the touch screen on Windows 10. Unless you’re screen is damaged, this is really a calibration issue. The taps and swipes don’t register as well as they did when the device was new. Regardless, with a touch screen the input can lose its accuracy. These too run Windows 10 and perhaps not as well as the Surface line. There is a growing range of two-in-one laptops that double as tablets. The Surface line isn’t the only touch enabled device that can run Windows 10. Windows 8 is something we don’t talk about anymore.
The Surface line is doing reasonably well with Windows 10 running on it. These two versions were built to run on both laptops/desktops and tablets. Windows 10 and Windows 8 are unlike other versions of Windows.