Ok this is truly remarkable. I hope vendors pick this up quickly. For them it would be easy to implement a "send to AI-model" and "store here" function. Which is basically all thats missing. I'm totally fine with missinterpreting some symbols. I would give my notes some overhowl anyway. But having all the equations and structures in place is such a huge time and brain capacity safer over typing it all from paper.
I agree, and reMarkable could implement such a feature in their cloud offering. This would also justify their subscription much more (there is still a lot of negative feedback) and really add a differentiating value to the device. I just fear they are not reading these comments :-(
Very cool. I've been using Obsidian to create markdown notes, and it supports both MathJAX and Mermaid. Because it can export to PDF, it might work with paper pro. I am going to go checkout Claude after watching this, because the conversion of hand written notes to LaTex after the lecture would be fantastic! I would be surprised if any math handwriting decoder could recognize when to use \cancel{}, and so that's fine. Those details can be manually fixed.
I have stopped using Obsidian (to simplify my workflow), but I have been trying a plugin some time ago: github.com/cobalamin/obsidian-remarkable?tab=readme-ov-file
Of course, Obsidian is great because it has so many features. By the way, Notion also supports Mermaid and Mathjax without plugins, could be an option as well.
I would enjoy having something like this! I use LaTeX quite a lot. I'm only teaching science this year, but I would still love to be able to convert my math handwriting to LaTeX. In years when I teach some math courses, it would be even more amazing. This isn't as instantaneous as I would wish to use live, but it would be very handy for converting my work. And it would be interesting to see what the AI does with my sketches of graphs. And the conversion is still very lacking for the way I make notes in a mix of sketches, diagrams, and text.
I fully understand, it may also depend on the complexity of your notes, maybe you want to give several LLMs a try, I have good experiences with Claude 3.5 recently in many applications, including coding assistance and image / page / PDF analysis ... but this is very "agile" market at the moment, so things may change quickly. Good luck to your students for the next exam :-)
This is such a cool example of integrating AI within your workflow.
Very creative approach.
thank you for sharing!
Many thanks and there is more to come ... :-)
Ok this is truly remarkable. I hope vendors pick this up quickly. For them it would be easy to implement a "send to AI-model" and "store here" function. Which is basically all thats missing.
I'm totally fine with missinterpreting some symbols. I would give my notes some overhowl anyway. But having all the equations and structures in place is such a huge time and brain capacity safer over typing it all from paper.
I agree, and reMarkable could implement such a feature in their cloud offering. This would also justify their subscription much more (there is still a lot of negative feedback) and really add a differentiating value to the device.
I just fear they are not reading these comments :-(
Very cool. I've been using Obsidian to create markdown notes, and it supports both MathJAX and Mermaid. Because it can export to PDF, it might work with paper pro. I am going to go checkout Claude after watching this, because the conversion of hand written notes to LaTex after the lecture would be fantastic!
I would be surprised if any math handwriting decoder could recognize when to use \cancel{}, and so that's fine. Those details can be manually fixed.
I have stopped using Obsidian (to simplify my workflow), but I have been trying a plugin some time ago: github.com/cobalamin/obsidian-remarkable?tab=readme-ov-file
Of course, Obsidian is great because it has so many features. By the way, Notion also supports Mermaid and Mathjax without plugins, could be an option as well.
I would enjoy having something like this! I use LaTeX quite a lot. I'm only teaching science this year, but I would still love to be able to convert my math handwriting to LaTeX. In years when I teach some math courses, it would be even more amazing.
This isn't as instantaneous as I would wish to use live, but it would be very handy for converting my work. And it would be interesting to see what the AI does with my sketches of graphs. And the conversion is still very lacking for the way I make notes in a mix of sketches, diagrams, and text.
I fully understand, it may also depend on the complexity of your notes, maybe you want to give several LLMs a try, I have good experiences with Claude 3.5 recently in many applications, including coding assistance and image / page / PDF analysis ... but this is very "agile" market at the moment, so things may change quickly.
Good luck to your students for the next exam :-)