Thanks for the input, but after several hours, removes, installs, updates, switch between Win7 and WinXP, and contact with their Tech Support, Wacom can kiss my tablet hello. It's on its way back home.
We should be past this point in computer hardware and software. In the 1980s we expected to struggle even with the ordinary, but not today. A business will easily waste double the cost of this unit (the Create was $164 on Amazon) with the end result likely being the same - drop kick it back to its maker.
Their tech support could only tell me that they cannot support Gimp or Inkscape because they are in the public domain. They suggested a new driver that did nothing (after updating I checked the Control Panel/System/Hardware/Device Manager/Driver and it was exactly the same as it was before the "update").
What drove me most nuts was that after rebooting the computer, the touch interface was pretty responsive for ~5 minutes. So if an IT guy was making the fix, he might see some working time and call it done. But after those 5 sweet minutes, it starts missing finger movements. It would not even drive its own tutorial in several places.
If you were looking for this as a device to improve your pattern making, and if you use a WinXP or Win7 computer, I'd suggest you look elsewhere.
On the positive side, Amazon Prime delivered it for free, and is sending UPS tomorrow to pick it up for return. I like Amazon Prime and use it a lot.