The general latency requirement for touch feedback is 30 milliseconds. For direct feedback it is not always possible to achieve this, as in high CPU load cases it may take more than 30 ms already before the pointer event reaches the application.
However, you can also affect the latency in your application: the maximum additional latency for direct feedback is as long as it takes for the longest running RunL of any active object running in application’s thread to execute. Hence keeping all RunL functions short improves the feedback latency (and of course also improves the overall responsiveness of the application).
Another way of improving the latency is optimizing redrawing in such a way that only the necessary area of the screen is drawn.
For example, if there are 20 buttons in the application and one of them is pressed down by a pointer event, then only that button should be redrawn and not the whole screen. This optimization improves both direct and area registry based feedback, because the window server cannot receive pointer events from the touch driver in case it is performing a draw operation, and unnecessarily massive draw operations can thus have significant effect on the latency.
Finally, it is recommended that you trigger direct feedback in HandlePointerEventL as the first thing before doing any other processing, such as redrawing.