My finger has been hovering over the buy button on the reMarkable Paper Pro page all day đ«
Nothing quite matches the kind of digital paper device I yearn for, but it gets pretty darn close. I wish I could build my ownâŠ
My finger has been hovering over the buy button on the reMarkable Paper Pro page all day đ«
Nothing quite matches the kind of digital paper device I yearn for, but it gets pretty darn close. I wish I could build my ownâŠ
@stroughtonsmith You wonât regret it.
The reMarkable UI and sync (to iOS and Mac!) is miles ahead of everything else in the e-note space.
Itâs the idealized âApple-likeâ experience. And nobody else is remotely close.
They also have, by a mile, the best cases and pen-attachment mechanics, which makes a huge difference in everyday convenience and niceness.
@marcoarment what I've always wanted: 'Adobe Ideas', but as digital paper. We're not fully there yet, but it's very clear reMarkable is made by the kinds of people who care about what I care about, where most others absolutely are not.
I wish Apple did one, with iBooks and Freeform supportâŠ
@stroughtonsmith The only downside about falling into the rM cult is that, like Apple, they move very slowly on certain things and leave huge features and markets completely unaddressed.
So every rM user has a few requests that we feel like weâre waiting an ETERNITY for, and they may never come.
But itâs so much better than the competitors in general that we accept that tradeoff.
@stroughtonsmith My list:
- interlinking, Supernote-style
- a proper successor to the reMarkable 2: 10-inch class, monochrome, 300 ppi, front-light, with the modern pen attachment and folio flap.
@marcoarment
For me, the no-brainer feature that I donât understand why itâs missing:
rM has a screen lock feature, so itâs all or nothing.
What about an in-between? Donât use screen lock (itâs inconvenient) but be able to lock certain notebooks.