This India-based company called paperd.ink is creating a low power E-paper development board. Later this month I'll take a look at Supernote which already has a enthusiastic community and promises to have a rich API for 3rd parties to explore and expand.Į Ink and "E Paper" are becoming more prominent on sites like Kickstarter and IndieGogo. It's the "color iPad Mini" to the Note Air's "black and white iPad Pro." This device is also Android so consider it a 2 inch smaller version of the Note Air. It adds something, and reading comics on it in Comixology is magical, albeit with some ghosting. It's not a rich deep marker type color, it's a muted older comic book type color.but it works. Do check out my video review on YouTube - here's a link right to the color parts. Onyx Boox Nova3 Color - This device is just 7.8" but has a color Kaleido Plus E Ink screen. But the Note Air is the best general purpose E Ink Tablet. As a note taker, the polish of the reMarkable 2 is the winner. You're getting more functionality, if slightly less software policy. If you have $500 and can't decide between a reMarkable and a Boox Note Air, it comes down to the fact that the Note Air is Android. Combine the Note Air with a Bluetooth Keyboard and you've got an E Ink Word Processor. It takes a moment to figure out but it's quite good when dialed in. That means you can easily share this Android Device's screen to your TV or monitor and it's.Android! There is some ghosting which is a feature, not a bug, but the Onyx Boox Note Air has a surprisingly large array of basically "ghosting display choices" that allow you to select the right balance between ghosting and eventual consistency. For example, it's a black and white device, so some shading and subtleties are lost.but they are there, in video memory. The surreal part is that what the device thinks its displaying doesn't always jive with what is being displayed. Also 10.3" and E Ink but adds a backlight, this hybrid device is a note taker and PDF viewer until you are suddenly installing Microsoft Office or Netflix. Onyx Boox Note Air - This could pass for the reMarkable from a distance, but it's actually an Android 10 devices that can have Google Play added. One small downer, I did drop a Marker and it landed just right and broke off not just the tip (no big deal, it comes with a dozen replacements) but also the tiny hole the tip goes into (not replaceable). I'd love to see someone be able to connect two of these and write as a shared whiteboard! There's so much potential here if they'd open up the APIs and integrate into things like OneNote, Teams, etc. It has a great Desktop App that also has a Beta "Live View" feature where you can share your screen in Teams or Zoom and see what you're writing on your reMarkable. If you pair it with a their Marker Plus that includes an eraser, the feeling is top notch. It's incredibly well built, feels high quality, is light but substantial, it doesn't warp or feel cheap. This 10.3 inch unlit screen is the best device for taking notes, reading PDFs, and.taking notes. However, if you like Moleskine notebooks and have filled many a year and your shelves are filled with many years' worth, then take a good look. This device is NOT an iPad and if your first thought is, "but I have an iPad" then this isn't for you. It has no browser, no apps to speak of, but an enthusiastic community of hackers and 3rd party projects. It's a dedicated and distraction-free note taker. The reMarkable 2 - This is the second-gen reMarkable. These displays are as close to paper as you can get, today, digitally. It's kind of like an Etch a Sketch, except with electricity rather than a surface covered in aluminum powder. We can apply negative or positive charge and the black or the white pigments will jump to the top. How does it work? The simple explanation is that there's tiny capsules of negatively charged black pigment and positively charged white pigment. These one page digital devices promise to act as Infinite Paper.Į Ink is easier on the eyes than OLED and iPads and the like. First the look, and most recently the feel of writing on paper. We seem to be putting a huge amount of technology and work into creating displays to replace paper. The starter Kindle is about $90 and you'll often find sales.įor mostly static content like books or magazines, E Ink is an amazing paper-like technology. They are bright in direct sunlight, and the newer ones have color temperature settings. I'd say 90% of my reading in the last 5 years has been on a Kindle with E Ink. I love my Amazon Kindle and I love its E Ink display. It's going to be interesting to see if it's a fad or if E Ink tablets are here to stay. There's something happening in the E Ink space, somewhat quietly, but consistently.
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