Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. The matte display looks great, but the tablet skips Nxtpaper's signature mode switcher.
TCL’s Note A1 combines a paper-feel display with handwriting recognition, transcription, and summaries – without the sluggishness of e-ink.
Struggling to choose? Both start at $499, but Paper Pro Move’s no-glare e?ink helps you write longer with fewer distractions.
Kobo has been the first among the big three to launch an e-note device. Prior to that, we had e-note devices from a clutch of Chinese companies along with a few others such as Remarkable. Amazon ...
The new TCL tablet offers an 11.5-inch LCD display that uses company’s proprietary technology to make it resemble an e-ink screen. This is done with anti-glare, matte texture that is embedded onto the ...
Kobo Elipsa 2E matches the reMarkable Paper Pro on a surprising number of features. The Elipsa 2E has a large screen, flexible note-taking features, and connections to cloud services. The tablet is ...
Here comes a new e-note device named Xueyisheng X1, which offers a 10.3-inch colour e-paper display. However, before you think it’s another E Ink device making its way into an already crowded scene, ...
Over the past few months, I’ve had the pleasure of testing out the reMarkable Paper Pro. You can read my full review here, but in short, it gets everything right about the note taking experience.
Using a digital notebook feels like an obvious step -- we've digitized our news, calendars, and almost all forms of communication. Not to mention the convenience that comes with syncing up data across ...
But colors often appear washed out and page refresh isn't exactly smooth. XPPen has launched an ePaper note device with three color levels and fast refresh. The Magic Note Pad doesn't use E Ink ...