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Author: Chaim Gartenberg
reMarkable’s original oversized E Ink tablet was an interesting idea from 2017: it’s a 10.3-inch tablet that had the ambitious idea to try to replace paper entirely with a digital tablet. It wasn’t quite successful. But now, the company is back with the reMarkable 2, a thinner, faster, cheaper, and generally nicer-looking attempt at realizing that goal.
The original reMarkable tablet was a fun product conceptually, but it was held back by a few major flaws, like its expensive $499 price point, laggy software, and poorly optimized menus.
The newer model is meant to fix most of those issues. At $399, it’s cheaper. There’s a new, dual-core processor that promises to be faster. The software has been updated and has new features, including...
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reMarkable’s original oversized E Ink tablet was an interesting idea from 2017: it’s a 10.3-inch tablet that had the ambitious idea to try to replace paper entirely with a digital tablet. It wasn’t quite successful. But now, the company is back with the reMarkable 2, a thinner, faster, cheaper, and generally nicer-looking attempt at realizing that goal.
The original reMarkable tablet was a fun product conceptually, but it was held back by a few major flaws, like its expensive $499 price point, laggy software, and poorly optimized menus.
The newer model is meant to fix most of those issues. At $399, it’s cheaper. There’s a new, dual-core processor that promises to be faster. The software has been updated and has new features, including...
Continue reading…
Continue reading...