for anyone interested: the updates in the past couple of months have made the experience so much more pleasurable !! - zooming in and out works excellent ! - scrolling has become so much easier, with a quick scroll option - sending pdf version directly via mail has become easier I have been working with mine (as a science student) for a year now, and i always enjoyed it, now even more. some of the problems (not being able to look up words...) are still bugging. All in all so happy!!
Thanks for sharing. It sounds great you are happy with your device, but it sucks if you can not look up words in your saved notes. Some apps like notability on iPad give you that ability and that is amazing and time saving. Do you know if Remarkable are working on it? Or was this option available on previous version, RM1?
is the third point of "sending pdf version directly via mail has become easier" only available via connect subscription? This is one of the turns offs, as connect is a monthly subscription and adds an additional 100$+ per year if I keep paying for it
Great to hear that they let you zoom in and out now, really strange that they did not let you do that before. For me the biggest problem are no choice of different color pencils (at least back when I tested it), the missing background lighting as well as the price. It is just too expensive for what you get. I do love that pencil with the eraser on the other end, tho.
I chose the remarkable because at my job I take notes every day, and the battery lasts way longer than if I bought an iPad. The screen won't bother your eyes vs iPad, and you're less likely to get distracted vs. the iPad and its apps. I think remarkable is very useful for people who love writing and love taking notes and need to take notes daily.
Yeah I have an iPad but I want something exclusively for work. I literally JUST want to take notes and be able to upload them to Dropbox. Right now I’m using legal pads, and I feel like it’s not very environmentally friendly…
exactly its just a replacement for a notebook and not a replacement for tablets laptops or any kind of such devices its best for using in integration with a tablet laptop or a pc just as a replacement of your personal diary
This product seemed completely overpriced and I would expect all of these issues to have been addressed if they are expecting consumers to pay that much for an unpolished experience
I bought both.. I use the iPad for all media and books and whatnot for my online courses and use the remarkable for my “paper/notebook” some instructors won’t allow an iPad but will allow the remarkable for tests and finals. It’s definitely not ideal for everyone, but it’s an amazing writing experience. I bought the First generation because of the physical buttons and I’m glad I did because the second Gen remarkable is extremely fragile and I’ve seen so many people having trouble having it repaired. Just some extra info for others who are still trying to decide. Also if you close the menu while writing it gets rid of the X so it won’t exit out.
Smart choice. I bought the 1st gen as well used in offerup for $100 lol. The software updates has kept the 1st gen device viable even today. The only downside is the battery life which only lasts me about 3 days of active use.
Yea this really is a cool and promising product that just hasn't hit the mark yet. I hope the company sticks around for long enough to put in the necessary polish. As you said, I'm eager to see what they can do in a couple of generations.
I thought Remarkable 2 now has pinch to zoom and two-finger drag to move around the page which would allow it to operate like the iPad air as you had explained.
@@slackmoehrle Too bad that holding out for the 2.6 release and getting a better case would have solved some of her problems. The left hand issue needs to be solved.
For the pen falling off, I had that problem too, but then realized I was placing it wrong. If you put it tip down, then it’s a much stronger bond. I also think there was an update and you can now zoom in or out of anything you write or read. Very nice crisp quality when zoomed in. They also added two additional colors, red and blue, which show up on the desktop version of the file. I have the Remarkable 2 and I’m really impressed tbh. It’s got some kinks, but I was honestly expecting a lot worse. Writing feels amazing and it has more types of writing features (fine liner, paint brush, calligraphy) than other competing tablets. The eraser on the pen is also the one thing that remarkable has over other paper tablets. I use it like crazy and it’s the most natural feeling when writing notes bc it’s muscle memory. It’s just so much more simple than other products. Only things I would fix is getting rid of the subscription and adding back lighting on the screen that you can turn on or off. Also, a more secure pen holder.
Hi Melody! Hopeful PhD student AND lefty here, this review was really helpful! I have one on the way to try out for the 30 day guarantee but I'll be watching out for these complaints (especially the left-handed incompatibility issues). I've subscribed, too. Always excited to see more women in academia on youtube
While I hate writing on glass (going to buy a apple pencil tip that will help), using Notability with the iPad gives me some functionality that is a non-negotiable requirement. As I take notes while on zoom-like meetings, I use Notability's camera feature to take a picture of the Participant list and it places it right in my notes. I can crop it and pinch zoom to position it right where I want to and annotate it. Further, I take screen shots of customer PowerPoint slides, or IT Architecture slides, which again places it right in the notes and I can size and annotate from there. The ability to use different ink colors and highlighter colors helps me draw attention to specific items in the note. Last, I don't leverage the convert writing to text function, but I don't have to. I can search for anything I've written (legibly) and the app finds it among the thousands of notes I've taken. No context on my choice.
This video is super useful! Thank you! I recently purchased a Boox Tablet Ultra. It is absolutely wonderful for reading research papers and taking handwritten notes. It's a bit expensive compared with Remarkable but absolutely worth the price.
0:39 Bingo! That's the first thing I needed to know about the Remarkable 2. Can it export what you write on it into a Windows text editor for proofing/formatting, etc? I don't want PDFs or PNGs from it. I'm not a diary or a to-do-list person, which is what this thing seems to be really for.
This is an excellent review, I can't fault anything that has been said. I have a ReMarkable 2 and I love writing on it, but all the things in this review are 100 percent correct this is not the right device for everybody - and some things just need to be fixed or reworked or added. I agree with the previous comment which hopes that ReMarkable themselves see this!
I really appreciate the review. I'm a computer science/ cyber security student who was considering picking up the Remarkable 2 as I wanted something super light and immune from distractions for things like math homework, annotating documents, etc. I've decided to go with the iPad Mini, a cheap third party stylus, a good protective folio case, and throw a paper feeling matte screen protector on it. The total cost of all of that is still less than the Remarkable 2 if I bought their first party accessories. Plus since handwriting recognition is so much better, that is another massive pro for the iPad given how awful my handwriting is. I think I'll keep it on focus mode and research ways to prevent myself from being able to open distraction apps. It seems that by allowing myself only note taking, school, Kindle, and calculator apps, I'll have exceeded the functionality of the Remarkable 2 and without the need for a continuous monthly subscription. One thing is that if remarkable decided to ditch their proprietary operating system on one model and go with Android while retaining the screen, I think that makes it a much more compelling option for tons of people. Handwriting recognition is often excellent on many Android apps, as well as GBoard, the default keyboard. They could have a few essential apps by default and make sure focus mode is always on to prevent distractions. I'm not sure if Google would allow this kind of device to get access to its Play Store however.
Thanks very much for such an honest review! Also mentioning your planned usage (as a student working with PDFs and books, and taking notes) was very very helpful!! Because I would use such devices for the exact same application.
You can zoom in and you. Pinch to zoom like any touch screen. Turn the pen around nib facing down and the pen magnet is twice as strong. Just close the toolbar and the X disappears. I'm left handed and never had an issue. Your issues with the week view and calendar, all you needed is a PDF planner and load that onto it. Or make your own tailored to your needs with PowerPoint or Canva. Lastly you absolutely can easily make custom templates. I don't think you used it long enough to get it. About the only device I can say has ever been able to get me organized and i love that it doesn't have apps.
Thank you so much! A little sad that this video got so little attention, but it’s really (finally) what I was looking for. Thank you so much. I am looking for a best way to take notes for university with good erasing and organizing features. You saved me time, nerves and money indeed. Thank you again
I've had a Remarkable 2 for a couple years and love it for what I need it to do: editing PDF manuscripts, brainstorming ideas for new novels, and reading long-form articles I get off the internet. I used to have stacks of yellow notepads strewn in my office; those are gone now, thanks to the Remarkable. Another use I find helpful is uploading ebooks to the Remarkable and being able to annotate them directly in the ebook file. I use this both for final edits on my own books as well as reading ebooks for story research purposes. Those things said, I have experienced most of what you find problematic and agree that those are all issues a potential buyer should consider. If I were "on the go" or had a busy schedule, I would HATE it for calendaring. The writing-to-text is still buggy, and if you are like me and have sloppy cursive, the only way to get a reasonably clean conversion is to print, which is a lot slower. I almost never use that feature. The glitching of page turning is also annoying, though it doesn't happen as much as it used to; I think the software has been much improved in the two years since you posted this video.
I found Remarkable is only for people who have distraction issues. It will help them so much to focus, which is totally different from iPad, given the multiple sources of distractions within it.
I was frustrated by the x button to, but i found that if you close the lateral menu before start writing, the x button disappear and there's no problem
Left handed writer here as well. The top left x can be hidden by pushing the top right button to hide the menu which hides the top left x as well. Unhide to change pens. Hiding the menu also gives you the full A5x area to write on.
Thanks for the review. There are some mean comments here, but don't listen to them. This is your review and your own opinion. I do think that you can compare the RM2 to an iPad, especially if you look at the price tag of $399. As a student I was also looking for a tablet where I can take notes, read, mark and edit documents (PDF). I can do it on both tablets, but the iPad is much more sophisticated since you can have split screen where you can put a PDF file one side and a note taking app on the other side. I use the Paperlike screen protector, which makes writing on an iPad more pleasant. I was interested on a ReMarkable 2, since I like e-Ink displays, but the price of the tablet is too much for what it actually offers.
I write the same way that you do. And yes it's incredibly annoying when that happens, but I noticed that if you touch the button that's above the ballpoint, pencil, fine liner, etc. It will disappear.
Thanks for the review! I'm looking for something for a similar use case as yourself and I think many of the same frustrations you outline would apply to myself as well.
I have had mine for a month and has changed my life. Amazing technology. I am a Ph.D. Physicists and now a CEO. She wants it to be a flying carpet. It is not perfect but hits nail on head to replace notebook digitally.
This video is very informative regarding choosing on getting the Remarkable. The thing is I don't see why it's being compared to an IPad or any tablet. They are completely different
Exactly what I was thinking to myself as I'm watching this "review". It's meant to be unlike an iPad. It's meant to be It's own device without the notifications and glass or bright lighting effects.
@@SaavsKitchen Exactly my thoughts too. Remarkable never promoted their product as tablet, so it quite pathetic for any reviewers to even consider comparing Remarkable with ipad or other tablets. We are not stupid to know what tablets is and what it offer Remarkable promoting their products specifically as digital paper note And from that point, this what we care about most. This reviewer spent enough effort to demonstrate her failure and mistake to buy the Remarkable for the wrong purpose. This what the video mostly about! Remarkable is a great product for what it offers. And people should treat it as normal paper, or note pad, nothing else No app no notifications, etc Just pure note taking, or sketching ideas Before it disappear from thoughts without any distractions, but with a little extra goodness which is more than enough what it is, and what it was created for.
So, did you buy the iPad air? Did you find it more useful? I just bought the remarkable, but after using it for a week, I am not yet sure that it's what I need. Willing to hear about your experience with the iPad. 🌷
Thanks for the review I was thinking of getting one of these also, but you really touched on a lot of that pain points that I was concerned with. I think I will also wait before buying one.
I'm a PhD student and I just bought a reMarkable 2 and I will be returning it for many of the same reasons. It still only allows you to email the handwriting-to-text and that is not at all useful. With the supposed integration with Google Drive, I thought I could export it there, but that doesn't seem to be the case. Thanks for your review!
like the honest review but I am kinda confused, you can zoom in and out on the remarkable 2 but she said that she couldn't, she probably didn't have that update
Nice review! I'm also an academic and so far the rm2 has been perfect for me. The pinch-to-zoom feature was really lacking, but the good news is that it was implemented in the last updated that just came out. About custom templates, you can in fact add custom templates via some hacky way. It's not very difficult and there are many on-line guides that teach you how to do that (or do it for you).
Hi Tiago, I think you can add custom templates by saving them as PDFs onto the device. The Remarkable company does seem like they are updating all the time though, so I think a lot of the problems I had will be fixed before the next version comes out.
I got the Supernote A5X for my work and it is a superior device in an aspects except for the slight feel advantage that the RM2 has. However, the built-in screen protector and excellent ceramic nib pen (no new nib replacements required) give the Supernote the edge in my opinion. The iPad some for versatility, whereas I believe the Supernote wins for removing distractions, excellent week-long battery life, writing, document annotations, and Kindle support. Voja from My Deep Guide has created excellent hyperlinked templates which are quite well laid out. Searching for keywords? You can use your own handwriting for organizing your notes as titles and you can make bookmarks for pages (not necessarily keywords but similar functionality). How are you liking your iPad?
I love my reMarkable 2. I literally got it today. I have the iPad Pro 2024 13". Having both I will say this. I will use my reMarkable more all day long when It comes to note taking. The iPad is wonderful and I do use it a lot. HOWEVERRRR.... when it comes to saving a bunch of paper and me using organization and not wanting a constant bright lit up screen hurting my eyes, I love it. I take a ton of notes and I cannot use my iPad to study as much as id like because I will obviously get headaches and tired eyes. It's nice to have this wonderful digital option that is basic and not lit up.
I am a Nursing Major and use mine religiously. I have notebooks that are filled and it has always been a pain to go back look for information. This allows me to have everything in one spot and I would not pivot away from this device under any circumstances due to its conveniences. And the fact that I can create functional PDFs in word or onenote and import them as PDFs with functional tabs has been a game changer for me. I love it and would probably find myself buying the next version if there is one.
Good summary. I also recently purchased a RM2, and am in the process of returning. In my use case, I manage multiple complex projects, so I had high hopes it would help me. However, the slowness to flip between pages when looking through 15 or 20 sheets was to slow for me; until working on the device, I had not realized I want the quick scroll capability offered by an iPad. Especially given that RM2 does not offer a word search feature. Second, the existing zoom feature is not useful for me. As I try to squeeze text on a page, I tried writing smaller or selecting the text and shrinking it; but when I tired the zoom function I was disappointed. Wish I could pinch with my fingers to zoom. Last, I tired it side by side with a iPad (without paper like film) this week. Surprisingly...I did not see a significant difference in the writing experience...aside from the Marker Plus nib being smaller than an Apple Pencil tip. It was kind of sad, given all the hype and advertisement over the RM2 writing experience. Perhaps RM2 has a glass cover on the screen; whereas RM1 did not; I’m speculating. Anyway, I also will be getting an iPad (11 inch), although I considered the SuperNote A5X; their pens do not require replacement of nibs, which I like. For fun, you maybe enjoy this video which compares the writing experiences: ruclips.net/video/rZ-mW6otcXw/видео.html
Michael & Philip: Thank you for your feedback. As stated above, my use case was to replace my multiple notebooks which I use to manage multiple projects. I gather you are happy with your RM2; that is good. For me, the key features I did not like are: 1. Cost: $650 with folio and pen 2.Cannot see two notebooks at once. 3. Slow responsiveness compared to standard tablets; I flip through notes often, similar to a physical notebook. In the end, I purchased a Samsung Tab S6 lite for ~€280. The writing experience is nice, with the soft tip of the pen; similar to the Staedler Noris Digital Jumbo pen. It also me a lot of customization, such as pen thickness, ink colors, highlighter colors, paper color; PDFs look great, and editing them is very convenient. Plus responsiveness is great; not to mention I can open up to three windows (e.g., two notebooks and a PDF). In the end, after experiencing several tablets, I say it comes down to the persons use case. For example, as a journal, I would probably be happy with the RM2. Plus, for some the e-ink is a major plus, because there is no backlight (although I don’t mind the backlight because the Tab S6 lite has a blue light filter and dark mode). Overall though, I am glad RM2 introduced me to digital note taking. Maybe I’ll get the RM3 when it comes out in a few years.
Excellent. I received exactly the same remarkable, portfolio, etc this week and have been struggling to see if it was a good choice. Then I came across your video and it answered so many concerns. I am leaning heavily on returning it next week and just investing paperlike screen protector for the iPad air I already own,
Thank you for the video, I'm a MA student now I know that I need to wait for a while to get something to actually benefit me more as a student, then a high price "reMark" that still dont do everything a real pen does for example.
I wanted to buy it and was hoping to find a medical student that was using this and had a video on it. I found your review helpful. It does not seem that it is very versatile and despite the fact I would love to use it. I guess I will continue with my I pad, notability and OneNote applications for now. TU
Great review. I’m in the opposite camp. I’ve been using an iPad for notes for years and just bought the Remarkable 2. I am also left handed but write with my palm below the pen s o the X hasn’t affected me. On the iPad the paper-like screen protector greatly improves the feel. I switched because I never found an app on the iPad that I clicked with. Would love to see a follow up on which apps you are using on the iPad and how you like them.
Thank you for making this video! I am in a similar situation, I am a master's program and I'm interested in a e-ink tablet. I watched the video from my iPad pro, I think I am going to give it a go with some of the note taking apps on iPad. I honestly never considered taking notes on my iPad before 🤔 I like the idea of the remarkable being a focused device, I have ADHD. It's not hard for a notification to derail me. So I am not done with the idea of the remarkable. My plan is to try out some of the iPad note taking apps along with using the focus mode on iPad. Perhaps that'll work well enough for me. The other nice thing about the iPad is I already use it for the university LMS and for Zoom on occasion. So maybe the note taking will be more natural with the iPad? You've given me a lot to think about. Thanks again!
Great review, thank you! The issues with the left and right hand writing were especially helpful for me but you also helped me with a few other things that I hadn't even considered, like the template problem(s).
Having a keyword search function for handwritten notes (converted to text on the device or not) is a show stopper. We hand write our daily journals and must be able to search them over extended time periods. We also want our privacy and do not want our data on someone else's servers...ever. We still use 2007 Onenote with notebooks spanning 2007 to today and sizes exceeding 1GB. Onenote will search that size and find all relevant 'hits' in a second or two. BUT, Onenote runs on a bulky laptop and it's a writing on glass experience. Still looking for the features and computer integration of Onenote but not the bulk of a laptop. iPad air???
I use the Staedtler Noris digital jumbo 180J 22. EMR Stylus with soft digital eraser. This is much cheaper than the remarkable pens and I find a slightly better writing experience.
I am a lefty, do you not just slat the tablet/notebook when you right. Back when I was a kid my older sister told me to slant my notebook to the right so that I didn't have to hook my wrist and mess it up. Her and I are lefties. I just copied her when I learned how to hold a crayon.
Thanks for the review! FYI - you are attaching the pen upside down. The magnetic strip on the side of the tablet is much stronger when you point the tip towards the bottom rather than the top. I've never had the pen fall off in my bag and use the same folio cover. Hope this tip helps keep your pen secured!
Cannot scope with review.I use it daily and "heavy duty". You can acquire templates for any purpose. It is a remarkable device. TRY TO TURN THE PEN to attach and fix it on the device. You will see how it fixes strongly...
Good review but I don’t think it’s fair to compare to IPad. It’s important to remember that the remarkable is intended to be like a PAPER notebook. So of course you can’t zoom in, because you don’t zoom in on standard paper. Also looking at one page at a time is the same for a standard notebook. I think it’s about your preference. You prefer the tablet over the notebook.
It would be TERRIBLE if they implemented automatic removal when you strike something off, because sometimes i strike something off instead of erasing it ON PURPOSE, so I can see what was there and what is not yet valid
People get the ReMarkable 2 because it is a minimalist device without all the tablet distractions. No email, social media, or notifications. Add to that the advantages of e-ink including that it is visible in full sunlight, the writing feel and the battery life. I prefer e-ink as the content appears to be on top of the display and not below glass as it seems with LCD tables. If none of this is important to someone then the iPad can be a better device.
Hi Joe, I haven't found myself distracted on the iPad at all, though I use it purely as a work device and I turn off notifications on almost all of my devices and apps. I guess it depends on the person. The iPad is not as good as the reMarkable in the sun, however I found the reMarkable screen still could also still have some glare at certain angles.
This review is kinda silly, like many other comments mentioned there’s templates for daily/weekly/yearly planners The whole point of remarkable is you like to write on paper but it’s difficult to maintain all those notebooks over the years…and so remarkable is like writing on a real paper, it’s incomparable to an iPad..if you’re okay writing on glass you don’t need remarkable This woman is simply not who this device is made for
@ P Gill: Its like you didn't even watch the review. The reviewer actually talks about the _provided_ planner templates. Her critique is about how she can't upload _custom_ planner templates. She also talks about how the Remarkable is the _best_ device for the writing feel but how some properties of the UI make it a lesser experience than writing on paper: the lack of zoom (which seems to be fixed in a software update) means you can't easily get a two page view and the position of UI elements on a touch screen means that for a left-hander you can be exited from the page you are writing on. She explains how writing on the iPad is a _lesser_ experience that the Remarkable but given you don't get exited out from your page by poorly placed UI elements and the better zoom options it is, overall, a more usable and effective device. TLDR; its not that her use case isn't appropriate for the Remarkable but somehow is appropriate for an iPad. Its that there are certain critical design/functionality decisions in the Remarkable _software_ that impact on the _usability_ of a device that has a much better writing _feel_. My advice to you is that next time: actually watch and comprehend the bloody review.
Good review! I thought the handwriting to text would be good if you were maybe sending some notes from a meeting you attended and needed to convert those notes into a document for yourself or your team. This device feels like it would be really good for like an Executive Assistant or someone that attended conferences and meetings and lectures that needs to jot down notes and use the note information later. Or someone that visits clients and makes notes during their meeting, and uses those notes to create a concept or strategy for said client. I can totally see it being useful for an assistant type person. Really interested in this device and glad I came across your review.
Software update has pinch and zoom. Left handed issue has not been one for me. Upgrade to the eraser stylist. This feels either uninformed or like you just had your mind made up already.
Nice to see a non biased review from a non paid neutral user - most people on RUclips are paid professional influencers and every product is great - even when it's not - NICE VIDEO
Hi Fabio. It allows you to input any kind of pdf on the device, so you can draw or highlight all over it. The highlighting becomes yellow when viewed on the computer. It doesn't have any 'smart' recognition though. So it will treat a 'wordy pdf' the same way as it would treat a child's drawing. There is no option to click on a word on a pdf and see a definition, for example.
Paperlike/IPad 12.9 along with good read and notability give a good experience for academic purposes and study. I still got supernote A5x for planning and free reading and annonations on non academic readings.
This has been one of my temptations over a year now (and more for the 1st version). So glad I resisted. And now they introduced a subscription nonsense
Thank you for this review! But a non-negligible point, the ligntening! How can we work when there is no more natural light or when it is weak? The end of the winter day outdoors, summer evenings etc. It is a minimalist device based on productivity but that limits things a lot when you work often and everywhere doesn't it?
I think having back lighting would go off the goal of reMarkable? Just my opinion--it wants to simulate the paper experience. Having a back light would ruin the concept, nonetheless, the feature e-ink wouldn't really be e-ink.
for anyone interested:
the updates in the past couple of months have made the experience so much more pleasurable !!
- zooming in and out works excellent !
- scrolling has become so much easier, with a quick scroll option
- sending pdf version directly via mail has become easier
I have been working with mine (as a science student) for a year now, and i always enjoyed it, now even more.
some of the problems (not being able to look up words...) are still bugging.
All in all so happy!!
Can you update on the handwriting to text feature? Any improvement?
Thanks for sharing. It sounds great you are happy with your device, but it sucks if you can not look up words in your saved notes. Some apps like notability on iPad give you that ability and that is amazing and time saving. Do you know if Remarkable are working on it? Or was this option available on previous version, RM1?
is the third point of "sending pdf version directly via mail has become easier" only available via connect subscription? This is one of the turns offs, as connect is a monthly subscription and adds an additional 100$+ per year if I keep paying for it
Great to hear that they let you zoom in and out now, really strange that they did not let you do that before.
For me the biggest problem are no choice of different color pencils (at least back when I tested it), the missing background lighting as well as the price. It is just too expensive for what you get.
I do love that pencil with the eraser on the other end, tho.
How to get referral discount or is there any offers on special occasions
Really appreciate the honest and balanced review. It's so hard to find a non-sponsored/promoted review these days. Thanks for taking the time.
I chose the remarkable because at my job I take notes every day, and the battery lasts way longer than if I bought an iPad. The screen won't bother your eyes vs iPad, and you're less likely to get distracted vs. the iPad and its apps. I think remarkable is very useful for people who love writing and love taking notes and need to take notes daily.
Yeah I have an iPad but I want something exclusively for work. I literally JUST want to take notes and be able to upload them to Dropbox. Right now I’m using legal pads, and I feel like it’s not very environmentally friendly…
The battery life is a really good point. Thanks for sharing!
exactly its just a replacement for a notebook and not a replacement for tablets laptops or any kind of such devices its best for using in integration with a tablet laptop or a pc just as a replacement of your personal diary
I agree. Which is exactly what it’s for and excels at.
This is the most useful review i've gotten yet, like of anything
Fantastic review...You saved me some money :)
I realize I am kinda randomly asking but do anyone know a good place to stream new movies online?
@Kason Eduardo Thank you, I went there and it seems like they got a lot of movies there :) I appreciate it !!
@Ryker Camden Glad I could help :D
Love your channel bro
This product seemed completely overpriced and I would expect all of these issues to have been addressed if they are expecting consumers to pay that much for an unpolished experience
I bought both.. I use the iPad for all media and books and whatnot for my online courses and use the remarkable for my “paper/notebook” some instructors won’t allow an iPad but will allow the remarkable for tests and finals. It’s definitely not ideal for everyone, but it’s an amazing writing experience. I bought the First generation because of the physical buttons and I’m glad I did because the second Gen remarkable is extremely fragile and I’ve seen so many people having trouble having it repaired. Just some extra info for others who are still trying to decide. Also if you close the menu while writing it gets rid of the X so it won’t exit out.
That’s a really interesting breakdown of media vs notes. Thanks for sharing :)
Smart choice. I bought the 1st gen as well used in offerup for $100 lol. The software updates has kept the 1st gen device viable even today. The only downside is the battery life which only lasts me about 3 days of active use.
There’s actually daily/weekly/monthly/yearly planner templates you can get that can do what you need.
I hope ReMarkable sees this video. This seems like a lack of user testing (most of which can be fixed in software). Thanks for the great review.
Yep, they implemented the pinch to zoom feature
@@dem4xed they did?
@@justsayin8893 Yes, as I said. You find videos of it online. I also own a rm2 and can confirm this really works
This is by far the most useful review on YT. Very informative!
Yea this really is a cool and promising product that just hasn't hit the mark yet. I hope the company sticks around for long enough to put in the necessary polish. As you said, I'm eager to see what they can do in a couple of generations.
Finally a left handed person to represent us!! great video
I thought Remarkable 2 now has pinch to zoom and two-finger drag to move around the page which would allow it to operate like the iPad air as you had explained.
Yes it does.
@@slackmoehrle ayy! I like tht!
@@slackmoehrle Too bad that holding out for the 2.6 release and getting a better case would have solved some of her problems. The left hand issue needs to be solved.
It does
THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH!! I've been debating about getting one for awhile now, and this was super helpful!!
So helpful! You gave me ALL the answers I needed...
For the pen falling off, I had that problem too, but then realized I was placing it wrong. If you put it tip down, then it’s a much stronger bond. I also think there was an update and you can now zoom in or out of anything you write or read. Very nice crisp quality when zoomed in. They also added two additional colors, red and blue, which show up on the desktop version of the file.
I have the Remarkable 2 and I’m really impressed tbh. It’s got some kinks, but I was honestly expecting a lot worse. Writing feels amazing and it has more types of writing features (fine liner, paint brush, calligraphy) than other competing tablets. The eraser on the pen is also the one thing that remarkable has over other paper tablets. I use it like crazy and it’s the most natural feeling when writing notes bc it’s muscle memory. It’s just so much more simple than other products. Only things I would fix is getting rid of the subscription and adding back lighting on the screen that you can turn on or off. Also, a more secure pen holder.
You're attaching the stylus incorrectly, that's why it's weak. You can zoom in on documents since a recent update.
Hi Melody! Hopeful PhD student AND lefty here, this review was really helpful! I have one on the way to try out for the 30 day guarantee but I'll be watching out for these complaints (especially the left-handed incompatibility issues). I've subscribed, too. Always excited to see more women in academia on youtube
Oh no! Did being left handed become a problem?
Also a lefty here, how was your experience
This is one of most thorough, accurate and honest review of any product i have see so far on youtube. Good Job. 👍
While I hate writing on glass (going to buy a apple pencil tip that will help), using Notability with the iPad gives me some functionality that is a non-negotiable requirement. As I take notes while on zoom-like meetings, I use Notability's camera feature to take a picture of the Participant list and it places it right in my notes. I can crop it and pinch zoom to position it right where I want to and annotate it. Further, I take screen shots of customer PowerPoint slides, or IT Architecture slides, which again places it right in the notes and I can size and annotate from there. The ability to use different ink colors and highlighter colors helps me draw attention to specific items in the note.
Last, I don't leverage the convert writing to text function, but I don't have to. I can search for anything I've written (legibly) and the app finds it among the thousands of notes I've taken. No context on my choice.
This video is super useful! Thank you! I recently purchased a Boox Tablet Ultra. It is absolutely wonderful for reading research papers and taking handwritten notes. It's a bit expensive compared with Remarkable but absolutely worth the price.
0:39 Bingo! That's the first thing I needed to know about the Remarkable 2. Can it export what you write on it into a Windows text editor for proofing/formatting, etc? I don't want PDFs or PNGs from it. I'm not a diary or a to-do-list person, which is what this thing seems to be really for.
This is an excellent review, I can't fault anything that has been said. I have a ReMarkable 2 and I love writing on it, but all the things in this review are 100 percent correct this is not the right device for everybody - and some things just need to be fixed or reworked or added. I agree with the previous comment which hopes that ReMarkable themselves see this!
I really appreciate the review. I'm a computer science/ cyber security student who was considering picking up the Remarkable 2 as I wanted something super light and immune from distractions for things like math homework, annotating documents, etc. I've decided to go with the iPad Mini, a cheap third party stylus, a good protective folio case, and throw a paper feeling matte screen protector on it. The total cost of all of that is still less than the Remarkable 2 if I bought their first party accessories. Plus since handwriting recognition is so much better, that is another massive pro for the iPad given how awful my handwriting is.
I think I'll keep it on focus mode and research ways to prevent myself from being able to open distraction apps. It seems that by allowing myself only note taking, school, Kindle, and calculator apps, I'll have exceeded the functionality of the Remarkable 2 and without the need for a continuous monthly subscription.
One thing is that if remarkable decided to ditch their proprietary operating system on one model and go with Android while retaining the screen, I think that makes it a much more compelling option for tons of people. Handwriting recognition is often excellent on many Android apps, as well as GBoard, the default keyboard. They could have a few essential apps by default and make sure focus mode is always on to prevent distractions. I'm not sure if Google would allow this kind of device to get access to its Play Store however.
I am sure there are other alternatives to remarkable 😅
I've never seen anyone discuss tech with such intensity and importance. Had to watch till the end.
Thanks very much for such an honest review! Also mentioning your planned usage (as a student working with PDFs and books, and taking notes) was very very helpful!! Because I would use such devices for the exact same application.
@@behroozkarami9832 the best solution I’ve found so far for annotating pdfs is liquid text on iPad/pc, and one note for general notes.
Thank you! I'm also doing a doctorate and have been umming and ahhing about buying the Remarkable 2. This was helpful.
Did you purchase ?
You can zoom in and you. Pinch to zoom like any touch screen.
Turn the pen around nib facing down and the pen magnet is twice as strong.
Just close the toolbar and the X disappears. I'm left handed and never had an issue.
Your issues with the week view and calendar, all you needed is a PDF planner and load that onto it. Or make your own tailored to your needs with PowerPoint or Canva.
Lastly you absolutely can easily make custom templates. I don't think you used it long enough to get it. About the only device I can say has ever been able to get me organized and i love that it doesn't have apps.
Thank you so much! A little sad that this video got so little attention, but it’s really (finally) what I was looking for. Thank you so much. I am looking for a best way to take notes for university with good erasing and organizing features. You saved me time, nerves and money indeed. Thank you again
I've had a Remarkable 2 for a couple years and love it for what I need it to do: editing PDF manuscripts, brainstorming ideas for new novels, and reading long-form articles I get off the internet. I used to have stacks of yellow notepads strewn in my office; those are gone now, thanks to the Remarkable. Another use I find helpful is uploading ebooks to the Remarkable and being able to annotate them directly in the ebook file. I use this both for final edits on my own books as well as reading ebooks for story research purposes.
Those things said, I have experienced most of what you find problematic and agree that those are all issues a potential buyer should consider. If I were "on the go" or had a busy schedule, I would HATE it for calendaring. The writing-to-text is still buggy, and if you are like me and have sloppy cursive, the only way to get a reasonably clean conversion is to print, which is a lot slower. I almost never use that feature. The glitching of page turning is also annoying, though it doesn't happen as much as it used to; I think the software has been much improved in the two years since you posted this video.
I found Remarkable is only for people who have distraction issues. It will help them so much to focus, which is totally different from iPad, given the multiple sources of distractions within it.
I was frustrated by the x button to, but i found that if you close the lateral menu before start writing, the x button disappear and there's no problem
Left handed writer here as well. The top left x can be hidden by pushing the top right button to hide the menu which hides the top left x as well. Unhide to change pens. Hiding the menu also gives you the full A5x area to write on.
Having just bought one, the inability to copy problem sets into a document (from a pdf) is tedious, though they fixed scrolling and zooming.
Best review I have seen so far, thank you.
Thanks for the review. There are some mean comments here, but don't listen to them. This is your review and your own opinion.
I do think that you can compare the RM2 to an iPad, especially if you look at the price tag of $399. As a student I was also looking for a tablet where I can take notes, read, mark and edit documents (PDF). I can do it on both tablets, but the iPad is much more sophisticated since you can have split screen where you can put a PDF file one side and a note taking app on the other side. I use the Paperlike screen protector, which makes writing on an iPad more pleasant. I was interested on a ReMarkable 2, since I like e-Ink displays, but the price of the tablet is too much for what it actually offers.
I don’t get the negative comments either, I thought her review was fair and super helpful.
I write the same way that you do. And yes it's incredibly annoying when that happens, but I noticed that if you touch the button that's above the ballpoint, pencil, fine liner, etc. It will disappear.
I like how you corrected your own grammar at 7:12. I do the same! Thx for the useful review video, student as well!
Thanks for the review! I'm looking for something for a similar use case as yourself and I think many of the same frustrations you outline would apply to myself as well.
I have had mine for a month and has changed my life. Amazing technology. I am a Ph.D. Physicists and now a CEO. She wants it to be a flying carpet. It is not perfect but hits nail on head to replace notebook digitally.
What a review, spot on.
This is what everyone look for, addressing real issues.
Great work, well done 👍
This video is very informative regarding choosing on getting the Remarkable. The thing is I don't see why it's being compared to an IPad or any tablet. They are completely different
Exactly what I was thinking to myself as I'm watching this "review". It's meant to be unlike an iPad. It's meant to be It's own device without the notifications and glass or bright lighting effects.
@@SaavsKitchen
Exactly my thoughts too.
Remarkable never promoted their product as tablet, so it quite pathetic for any reviewers to even consider comparing Remarkable with ipad or other tablets.
We are not stupid to know what tablets is and what it offer
Remarkable promoting their products specifically as digital paper note
And from that point, this what we care about most.
This reviewer spent enough effort to demonstrate her failure and mistake to buy the Remarkable for the wrong purpose.
This what the video mostly about!
Remarkable is a great product for what it offers.
And people should treat it as normal paper, or note pad, nothing else
No app no notifications, etc
Just pure note taking, or sketching ideas
Before it disappear from thoughts without any distractions, but with a little extra goodness which is more than enough what it is, and what it was created for.
But what then is difference with a nicely spiral bound set of A4 sheets and jotting with a deep black buttery smooth Blackwing or Apsara pencil?
So, did you buy the iPad air? Did you find it more useful? I just bought the remarkable, but after using it for a week, I am not yet sure that it's what I need. Willing to hear about your experience with the iPad. 🌷
Thanks for the review I was thinking of getting one of these also, but you really touched on a lot of that pain points that I was concerned with. I think I will also wait before buying one.
I'm a PhD student and I just bought a reMarkable 2 and I will be returning it for many of the same reasons. It still only allows you to email the handwriting-to-text and that is not at all useful. With the supposed integration with Google Drive, I thought I could export it there, but that doesn't seem to be the case. Thanks for your review!
like the honest review but I am kinda confused, you can zoom in and out on the remarkable 2 but she said that she couldn't, she probably didn't have that update
Pen is supposed to be pointed down when attached to side. Someone posted video on Reddit showing the magnet hold is much stronger point down.
I think I'll follow your lead and wait a bit to see if handwriting to text gets better in future iterations of the dévide. Thank you.
With the icon above the pen selection, you are able to hide the complete menu, except that icon.
Nice review!
I'm also an academic and so far the rm2 has been perfect for me. The pinch-to-zoom feature was really lacking, but the good news is that it was implemented in the last updated that just came out. About custom templates, you can in fact add custom templates via some hacky way. It's not very difficult and there are many on-line guides that teach you how to do that (or do it for you).
Hi Tiago, I think you can add custom templates by saving them as PDFs onto the device. The Remarkable company does seem like they are updating all the time though, so I think a lot of the problems I had will be fixed before the next version comes out.
@@MelodyDobrinin How do you get the updates? A text, or email, with a link?
I got the Supernote A5X for my work and it is a superior device in an aspects except for the slight feel advantage that the RM2 has. However, the built-in screen protector and excellent ceramic nib pen (no new nib replacements required) give the Supernote the edge in my opinion.
The iPad some for versatility, whereas I believe the Supernote wins for removing distractions, excellent week-long battery life, writing, document annotations, and Kindle support.
Voja from My Deep Guide has created excellent hyperlinked templates which are quite well laid out.
Searching for keywords? You can use your own handwriting for organizing your notes as titles and you can make bookmarks for pages (not necessarily keywords but similar functionality).
How are you liking your iPad?
Oh I have a question 🙋♂️ Could I see all the pages separately in a birds eye view?
yes
@@r3lativ cool, thanks.
Love my Remarkable. I use it everyday hands down better writing experience over my ipad Pro.
I love my reMarkable 2. I literally got it today. I have the iPad Pro 2024 13".
Having both I will say this. I will use my reMarkable more all day long when It comes to note taking. The iPad is wonderful and I do use it a lot. HOWEVERRRR.... when it comes to saving a bunch of paper and me using organization and not wanting a constant bright lit up screen hurting my eyes, I love it. I take a ton of notes and I cannot use my iPad to study as much as id like because I will obviously get headaches and tired eyes. It's nice to have this wonderful digital option that is basic and not lit up.
I am a Nursing Major and use mine religiously. I have notebooks that are filled and it has always been a pain to go back look for information. This allows me to have everything in one spot and I would not pivot away from this device under any circumstances due to its conveniences.
And the fact that I can create functional PDFs in word or onenote and import them as PDFs with functional tabs has been a game changer for me.
I love it and would probably find myself buying the next version if there is one.
Good summary. I also recently purchased a RM2, and am in the process of returning. In my use case, I manage multiple complex projects, so I had high hopes it would help me. However, the slowness to flip between pages when looking through 15 or 20 sheets was to slow for me; until working on the device, I had not realized I want the quick scroll capability offered by an iPad. Especially given that RM2 does not offer a word search feature.
Second, the existing zoom feature is not useful for me. As I try to squeeze text on a page, I tried writing smaller or selecting the text and shrinking it; but when I tired the zoom function I was disappointed. Wish I could pinch with my fingers to zoom.
Last, I tired it side by side with a iPad (without paper like film) this week. Surprisingly...I did not see a significant difference in the writing experience...aside from the Marker Plus nib being smaller than an Apple Pencil tip. It was kind of sad, given all the hype and advertisement over the RM2 writing experience. Perhaps RM2 has a glass cover on the screen; whereas RM1 did not; I’m speculating.
Anyway, I also will be getting an iPad (11 inch), although I considered the SuperNote A5X; their pens do not require replacement of nibs, which I like.
For fun, you maybe enjoy this video which compares the writing experiences:
ruclips.net/video/rZ-mW6otcXw/видео.html
I bought an iPad and I'm using it primarily with the Nebo app and I'm very happy with it :)
@Michael Berstein good question
Michael & Philip: Thank you for your feedback. As stated above, my use case was to replace my multiple notebooks which I use to manage multiple projects.
I gather you are happy with your RM2; that is good. For me, the key features I did not like are:
1. Cost: $650 with folio and pen
2.Cannot see two notebooks at once.
3. Slow responsiveness compared to standard tablets; I flip through notes often, similar to a physical notebook.
In the end, I purchased a Samsung Tab S6 lite for ~€280. The writing experience is nice, with the soft tip of the pen; similar to the Staedler Noris Digital Jumbo pen. It also me a lot of customization, such as pen thickness, ink colors, highlighter colors, paper color; PDFs look great, and editing them is very convenient. Plus responsiveness is great; not to mention I can open up to three windows (e.g., two notebooks and a PDF).
In the end, after experiencing several tablets, I say it comes down to the persons use case. For example, as a journal, I would probably be happy with the RM2. Plus, for some the e-ink is a major plus, because there is no backlight (although I don’t mind the backlight because the Tab S6 lite has a blue light filter and dark mode).
Overall though, I am glad RM2 introduced me to digital note taking. Maybe I’ll get the RM3 when it comes out in a few years.
Thanks for an honest and thorough review. Appreciate it!
13:28 do you write in cursive?
Thanks a lot for the honest review!
What about the actual reading experience of those journal articles??
yeah, I came here for that. Quite surprised that she didn't bring this up
Excellent. I received exactly the same remarkable, portfolio, etc this week and have been struggling to see if it was a good choice. Then I came across your video and it answered so many concerns. I am leaning heavily on returning it next week and just investing paperlike screen protector for the iPad air I already own,
Thank you for the video, I'm a MA student now I know that I need to wait for a while to get something to actually benefit me more as a student, then a high price "reMark" that still dont do everything a real pen does for example.
I wanted to buy it and was hoping to find a medical student that was using this and had a video on it. I found your review helpful. It does not seem that it is very versatile and despite the fact I would love to use it. I guess I will continue with my I pad, notability and OneNote applications for now. TU
Great review. I’m in the opposite camp. I’ve been using an iPad for notes for years and just bought the Remarkable 2. I am also left handed but write with my palm below the pen s o the X hasn’t affected me. On the iPad the paper-like screen protector greatly improves the feel. I switched because I never found an app on the iPad that I clicked with. Would love to see a follow up on which apps you are using on the iPad and how you like them.
Which one is your daily which one do you use?
Thank you for making this video! I am in a similar situation, I am a master's program and I'm interested in a e-ink tablet. I watched the video from my iPad pro, I think I am going to give it a go with some of the note taking apps on iPad. I honestly never considered taking notes on my iPad before 🤔
I like the idea of the remarkable being a focused device, I have ADHD. It's not hard for a notification to derail me. So I am not done with the idea of the remarkable. My plan is to try out some of the iPad note taking apps along with using the focus mode on iPad. Perhaps that'll work well enough for me. The other nice thing about the iPad is I already use it for the university LMS and for Zoom on occasion. So maybe the note taking will be more natural with the iPad? You've given me a lot to think about. Thanks again!
You can also set up guided access on your iPad and let someone else control the guided access passcode.
Great review, thank you! The issues with the left and right hand writing were especially helpful for me but you also helped me with a few other things that I hadn't even considered, like the template problem(s).
Having a keyword search function for handwritten notes (converted to text on the device or not) is a show stopper. We hand write our daily journals and must be able to search them over extended time periods. We also want our privacy and do not want our data on someone else's servers...ever.
We still use 2007 Onenote with notebooks spanning 2007 to today and sizes exceeding 1GB. Onenote will search that size and find all relevant 'hits' in a second or two. BUT, Onenote runs on a bulky laptop and it's a writing on glass experience.
Still looking for the features and computer integration of Onenote but not the bulk of a laptop.
iPad air???
You can now pinch zoom on Remarkable 2
I use the Staedtler Noris digital jumbo 180J 22. EMR Stylus with soft digital eraser. This is much cheaper than the remarkable pens and I find a slightly better writing experience.
I am a lefty, do you not just slat the tablet/notebook when you right. Back when I was a kid my older sister told me to slant my notebook to the right so that I didn't have to hook my wrist and mess it up. Her and I are lefties. I just copied her when I learned how to hold a crayon.
thank you for wonderful review. i am not sure, is it good for pdf-reading-machine? what is your opinion?
Thanks for the review! FYI - you are attaching the pen upside down. The magnetic strip on the side of the tablet is much stronger when you point the tip towards the bottom rather than the top. I've never had the pen fall off in my bag and use the same folio cover. Hope this tip helps keep your pen secured!
Nice. Have you bought already the iPad? if yes could you share a video about your experience please :)
Hi Jeremy, thanks for your comment. I did buy the iPad and I'm working on a video now. I'll post here when it's done!
One of the updates introduced page buttons on the menu.
Cannot scope with review.I use it daily and "heavy duty". You can acquire templates for any purpose. It is a remarkable device. TRY TO TURN THE PEN to attach and fix it on the device. You will see how it fixes strongly...
Good review but I don’t think it’s fair to compare to IPad. It’s important to remember that the remarkable is intended to be like a PAPER notebook. So of course you can’t zoom in, because you don’t zoom in on standard paper. Also looking at one page at a time is the same for a standard notebook. I think it’s about your preference. You prefer the tablet over the notebook.
did you test drawing gloves on your left hand to see if it would fix that dumb issue with not being able to move the x button?
It would be TERRIBLE if they implemented automatic removal when you strike something off, because sometimes i strike something off instead of erasing it ON PURPOSE, so I can see what was there and what is not yet valid
I have the remarkable and I’m not sure if you know but you can zoom in and out you have to use two fingers
Try Supernote A5X
Thank you for the in-depth review.
One thing is that the magnet is weak because you put it up side down, stick it the other way would be much much stronger
This was a great review, and very helpful! Thank you for putting the time and effort into making it!
I think remarkable made an update to do pinch to zoom now
I loved the review, very good summary and insight.
I would probably also prefer tactile buttons to turn the pages
Do you have a referral link to purchase a Remarkable2?
People get the ReMarkable 2 because it is a minimalist device without all the tablet distractions. No email, social media, or notifications. Add to that the advantages of e-ink including that it is visible in full sunlight, the writing feel and the battery life. I prefer e-ink as the content appears to be on top of the display and not below glass as it seems with LCD tables. If none of this is important to someone then the iPad can be a better device.
Hi Joe, I haven't found myself distracted on the iPad at all, though I use it purely as a work device and I turn off notifications on almost all of my devices and apps. I guess it depends on the person.
The iPad is not as good as the reMarkable in the sun, however I found the reMarkable screen still could also still have some glare at certain angles.
This review is kinda silly, like many other comments mentioned there’s templates for daily/weekly/yearly planners
The whole point of remarkable is you like to write on paper but it’s difficult to maintain all those notebooks over the years…and so remarkable is like writing on a real paper, it’s incomparable to an iPad..if you’re okay writing on glass you don’t need remarkable
This woman is simply not who this device is made for
Totally agree 👏🏻
The lady said that herself.
@ P Gill: Its like you didn't even watch the review. The reviewer actually talks about the _provided_ planner templates. Her critique is about how she can't upload _custom_ planner templates.
She also talks about how the Remarkable is the _best_ device for the writing feel but how some properties of the UI make it a lesser experience than writing on paper: the lack of zoom (which seems to be fixed in a software update) means you can't easily get a two page view and the position of UI elements on a touch screen means that for a left-hander you can be exited from the page you are writing on.
She explains how writing on the iPad is a _lesser_ experience that the Remarkable but given you don't get exited out from your page by poorly placed UI elements and the better zoom options it is, overall, a more usable and effective device.
TLDR; its not that her use case isn't appropriate for the Remarkable but somehow is appropriate for an iPad. Its that there are certain critical design/functionality decisions in the Remarkable _software_ that impact on the _usability_ of a device that has a much better writing _feel_.
My advice to you is that next time: actually watch and comprehend the bloody review.
If you are left-handed, can't you flip the tablet so that the handle is on the right side?
Strangely, no.
Good review! I thought the handwriting to text would be good if you were maybe sending some notes from a meeting you attended and needed to convert those notes into a document for yourself or your team. This device feels like it would be really good for like an Executive Assistant or someone that attended conferences and meetings and lectures that needs to jot down notes and use the note information later. Or someone that visits clients and makes notes during their meeting, and uses those notes to create a concept or strategy for said client. I can totally see it being useful for an assistant type person. Really interested in this device and glad I came across your review.
Is the any chance open some color templates? Sometimes when study is very hello fully and you can write in colors too?
I don't think there is any colour on the device. But this might've changed with later iterations of the product.
Software update has pinch and zoom.
Left handed issue has not been one for me.
Upgrade to the eraser stylist.
This feels either uninformed or like you just had your mind made up already.
Nice to see a non biased review from a non paid neutral user - most people on RUclips are paid professional influencers and every product is great - even when it's not - NICE VIDEO
As an academic, what about reading papers, highlight them and so on?
Hi Fabio. It allows you to input any kind of pdf on the device, so you can draw or highlight all over it. The highlighting becomes yellow when viewed on the computer. It doesn't have any 'smart' recognition though. So it will treat a 'wordy pdf' the same way as it would treat a child's drawing. There is no option to click on a word on a pdf and see a definition, for example.
Thanks and congrats for the excellent video!
Great honest review. Thank you.
Paperlike/IPad 12.9 along with good read and notability give a good experience for academic purposes and study. I still got supernote A5x for planning and free reading and annonations on non academic readings.
If you do not mind, please keep writing your experiences on notetaking apps-reference manager app-Data analysis app etc.
This has been one of my temptations over a year now (and more for the 1st version). So glad I resisted. And now they introduced a subscription nonsense
Thank you for this review! But a non-negligible point, the ligntening! How can we work when there is no more natural light or when it is weak? The end of the winter day outdoors, summer evenings etc. It is a minimalist device based on productivity but that limits things a lot when you work often and everywhere doesn't it?
I think having back lighting would go off the goal of reMarkable? Just my opinion--it wants to simulate the paper experience. Having a back light would ruin the concept, nonetheless, the feature e-ink wouldn't really be e-ink.