About this episode
Starring Sarah Lane and Jenn Cutter Sarah Lane gives her thoughts about the Remarkable 2, an e-ink tablet for writing and reading. $299 (was $399 at time of purchase) Marker Plus (pencil) - $129 *If you buy with Connect, you get a $150 discount on the hardware and 2 months free service, worth checking out. Several subscription options Marker Plus highlights: An actual highlighter pen option! Several different types of pens: ballpoint, calligraphy, pencil, mechanical pencil… all have slightly different feels on the tablet Easy tap to navigate - you can use a finger tablet-style, but the Marker feels more efficient Erase tool is just cool. The Remarkable is smart enough to know when you haven’t totally erased something and will clean up the rest. Initial thoughts: I don’t use a physical pen anymore, in fact I always struggle to find a pen in my house on the rare occasion I need one. But physically writing things down has always helped my memory retention, and the Remarkable 2 taps into that as an extremely polished writing tablet I’m not much of a drawer/doodler/etc. There are plenty of really good use cases for Remarkable 2 that I won’t take advantage of. Holy crap, signing documents is so easy! The amount of document templates is impressive, I don’t know how you’d ever need something not in this library Navigation takes a little getting used to, but it’s simple once you know what your options are Syncing with my Google Drive is a game changer. (on supported files, of course) E-Reader capability: At first glance the Remarkable 2 isn’t a great e-reader. Despite the nice book size, it doesn’t have any sort of backlight… you really do have to be under a lamp as if it were an actual book. You’re not going to take this tablet camping. It also doesn’t support DRM-ePUB. You can find non-DRM ebooks online, but not a Kindle type library You can use Calibre (free ebook organizer software) + a plugin to strip DRM from an ePUB book, then it shows up on the Remarkable 2 just fine. I tried this with a couple library e-books. This process is not very intuitive, but it’s possible. However, it’s also illegal, so there’s that. Nitpicks: Last year I was gifted a Kindle Oasis, which has an adjustable backlit screen. It makes the Remarkable 2’s screen seem pretty dim. I wish there were a way to punch up brightness a bit. The pencil does snap onto the magnetized sides of the Remarkable 2 but not always in the place I think it should be. For such a pricey add-on, I’m always worried it’ll go missing. There are times I wish I had better internet integration. You can print anything online to PDF and sync from there, but that takes a few steps. I tried to use the Remarkable 2 for DTNS prep and it just didn’t make any sense. OVERALL: The Remarkable 2 is powerhouse for anyone annotating documents, sketching, freeform stuff. Although you can sync over WIFI and email documents easily from the tablet, it’s not really “online” Love the form factor, I don’t think it would work at a smaller size If you reach for your notepad regularly, you will love this tablet. Pricing feels high, especially for the subscription options. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.