Tag: e ink

  • Amazon Kindle Scribe (2nd Gen) Review: Room for More

    Amazon Kindle Scribe (2nd Gen) Review: Room for More

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    Amazon’s Kindle Scribe entered a saturated digital notebook market in 2022, competing with the likes of Kobo, ReMarkable, and Boox. But the first-gen Scribe had one leg over everyone else: It was also a Kindle. Its biggest flaw? You couldn’t annotate directly on ebooks, a standard feature most people would expect on a digital e-paper notebook.

    This has been rectified on the second-generation Kindle Scribe, and there are a couple of other additions like generative artificial intelligence features and a slightly redesigned Premium Pen stylus, which is now included. But the rest of the Scribe remains mostly the same. It’s a great digital notebook for anyone who likes jotting stuff down on paper, and since it pulls double duty as an e-reader, you don’t have to carry another Kindle.

    Top view of Amazon Kindle Scribe 2nd Generation a teal digital notebook and ebook reader. Left image shows thumbnails of...

    Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

    Unfortunately, the price has jumped to $400, a $60 bump (technically, a $30 bump if you compare it directly to the original Scribe with the Premium Pen). But there’s a big fact you ought to know: The first-gen Scribe can access all the new capabilities of the second-gen model via a software update (you can manually download it or wait for an over-the-air update). It’s nice that existing customers don’t have to upgrade, but it leaves little incentive to spend more on the latest.

    Smooth and Supreme

    The Scribe has the same chassis as its predecessor. The back is a mix of recycled aluminum and post-consumer recycled plastics, yet it feels luxe. It’s still not waterproof like the Kindle Paperwhite and Colorsoft, which is strange for a productivity device that will inevitably be placed next to a coffee mug.

    The front is home to a 10.2-inch E Ink screen with 300 pixels per inch (94 nits of max brightness). It can automatically adjust the brightness depending on the environment, and there’s even adjustable warm lighting, which makes it a little easier on the eyes in low light. I enjoy using the latter while journaling on the Scribe before bed. There’s a dark mode too, which turns the background black and the font white (also useful at night).

    Front view of Amazon Kindle Scribe 2nd Generation a teal digital notebook and ebook reader with illustration of a bird...

    Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

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  • Amazon’s Colorsoft Launch Has Left Some Customers Without a Kindle at All

    Amazon’s Colorsoft Launch Has Left Some Customers Without a Kindle at All

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    Customers who decided to take advantage of the program sent in their older Kindles under the assumption that the Colorsoft would replace their current e-reader. The unexpected display issues meant this didn’t go according to plan. They’ve taken their complaints to Reddit and reviews on the Colorsoft product page on Amazon, which has a 2.5/5 star rating.

    It’s worth noting that not everyone has run into the display issue—I didn’t notice it in my Colorsoft review unit—but if you do, you should reach out to Amazon’s customer service team for a refund or replacement. But this is where things get sticky. If you choose a refund and had used the discount, you’ll only get back the exact amount that you paid. Since the 20 percent off coupon is no longer valid, you’ll now have to pay full price for the Colorsoft, whenever Amazon starts shipping it again. If you choose to wait for a replacement, you’ll have to wait an estimated three to five weeks to receive the replacement model.

    Waiting until mid-December might be fine for some, but those who traded in their previous e-readers are left without devices. Even if customers decide to use the refund to buy a new Paperwhite or basic Kindle, they can’t take advantage of the trade-in promotions because they no longer have devices to send in. Instead, they’ll have to pay full price. According to multiple reviews on the Colorsoft product page on Amazon, customer service representatives have told customers the original discount cannot be transferred to another Kindle. (It doesn’t help that Amazon’s new lineup of e-readers are more expensive than their predecessors.)

    Some customers have had better luck. Depending on the trade-in, Amazon will sometimes deposit the gift card to your account instantly as long as you send the device in within 30 days. Some held on to their original Kindles until they received the new one, while one customer managed to secure an extension on their return. The instant payments seem to only apply in the US—on multiple Reddit threads, folks in the UK say Amazon needs to appraise their devices before receiving trade-in credit.

    I didn’t experience the yellow bar or the discoloration on my review unit, but I did have a few other reservations about the Colorsoft. The color screen is impressive, but the constant refreshing to render colors and load times is a little jarring (this is a problem on most color e-readers). It’s also just too expensive, costing $80 more than the Paperwhite Signature, which has many of the same features except for the color screen. The Colorsoft doesn’t have page-turn buttons or stylus support, which also makes it feel not a good value.

    We’ve reached out to Amazon about these complaints but the company had not commented by press time.

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  • Kindle Colorsoft Review: A Color E-Reader and Not Much Else

    Kindle Colorsoft Review: A Color E-Reader and Not Much Else

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    However, I did notice that text looks a little fuzzy—not just with color content but black-and-white too. I only spotted this because I came from using the new Paperwhite, which has the highest contrast ratio of any Kindle and delivers super-sharp text. When I switched to the Colorsoft, my eyes had to adjust a bit. It’s not as noticeable with comics, but it took me a moment to get used to while reading standard books.

    It’s tougher to ignore the loading time when turning pages on illustrations. The screen will typically flutter once or twice while processing the color. The same thing happens when zooming in too. At one point, I was zooming in on a frame and noticed a small black loading square appear. This has yet to happen again, but it was slightly concerning. Amazon isn’t alone with this though—this kind of refresh lag exists on other color ebook readers too.

    Even if the flashing colors are commonplace on all color e-readers, it’s an important factor to consider if you’re largely buying one for comic books and graphic novels. The blinking screen might feel jarring while turning pages or zooming in, particularly during long reading sessions, and it can sometimes break you out of the experience or distract you from the story. I enjoyed reading comics on the Paperwhite a little more for this reason, even if it meant no color.

    Looking for More

    Setting aside the color screen, the Kindle Colorsoft doesn’t feel too different from the Paperwhite. It has up to two months of battery life, there’s wireless charging support, and the screen can automatically adjust its brightness based on your environment. You’re spending an extra $80 over the 12th-gen Paperwhite for a color screen.

    With all the claims to have completely “rebuilt” the Kindle, the $280 Colorsoft was the right opportunity to bring back page-turn buttons, which we haven’t seen on a Kindle since the Oasis in 2019. That model also had a similarly large 7-inch screen and was made of a metal-infused plastic that felt super-premium, not the soft-touch plastic in the Colorsoft. But I digress. Buttons! Which turn the page forward and back! It’s not hard. The #Booktok community has resorted to using unsightly remotes for sheer convenience.

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  • Kindle Paperwhite Review (2024): The E-Reader to Get

    Kindle Paperwhite Review (2024): The E-Reader to Get

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    I don’t have many regrets, but buying the basic Kindle a few years ago is one of them. Ironically, I hadn’t done much research before purchasing it. I wanted to get back into reading and didn’t want to spend much—I was struggling to finish hard copies and thought an ebook reader would solve the problem. I marched onto Amazon and bought myself the basic Kindle from 2019.

    Between the low screen resolution, slow performance, and short battery life, the frustrating experience kept me from using it as much as I wanted to. I should’ve bought the Kindle Paperwhite instead, even if it was marginally more expensive—buy once, cry once, right? I was convinced that the higher-quality screen and fancy lighting features would make it more enjoyable. Alas, I worried a Paperwhite would stay dead and dusty in a drawer, just like my Kindle, so I didn’t buy it.

    And yet, a Paperwhite ended up in my lap a few years later. Amazon just announced a new version—the Paperwhite and the Paperwhite Signature Edition—which are thinner and faster and have longer battery life. I tested the latter, which has a few extra perks such as wireless charging and 32 gigabytes of storage (for an extra cost). After weeks of use, it’s easy to understand why this is Amazon’s most beloved Kindle—it’s Paperwhite or bust.

    The Kindle Paperwhite a pink ereader. Left The black and white cover of an ebook on the screen. Right The pink backside...

    Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

    Better, Faster, Stronger

    Coming from a smaller Kindle, I was worried that the Paperwhite would feel too unwieldy, especially now that it’s slightly thinner than its predecessor (7.8 mm versus 8.1 mm) but heavier. It’s still easy to hold one-handed, but I sometimes feel my arm cramp during longer reading seasons—I quickly understand why so many people attach a PopSocket to their Paperwhite.

    The display is now 7 inches (up from 6.8) thanks to slimmer bezels around the screen. It also has the highest contrast ratio of any Kindle, which more or less allows text and images to look sharper on the screen. While both changes are nice, these differences are incremental over the 2021 Paperwhite (8/10, WIRED Recommends), and no, you do not need to upgrade if you have that model.

    A hand holding up a Kindle Paperwhite a slim ereader with the screen showing the cover of an ebook

    Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

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  • ReMarkable’s Paper Pro Brings a Color Screen to Its Focus-Friendly Tablet Lineup

    ReMarkable’s Paper Pro Brings a Color Screen to Its Focus-Friendly Tablet Lineup

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    I often find it very hard to write on my computer. As soon as I settle in and let those creative juices flow … ding! In comes a Slack notification. OK, it’ll take two seconds to address this first. Minutes later, I’ll feel the urge to check my inbox. Oh wow, six urgent emails. Two hours later, I might have typed a single word on my page. That usually leads to a late night of writing. Rinse and repeat.

    The ReMarkable 2 has been a salve in this process. This e-paper tablet with a comfy stylus is an excellent digital notepad—it mimics paper and pen far better than many other devices—and the keyboard attachment has become a great way for me to type up stories distraction-free. You can write notes, draw sketches, mark up PDFs, and organize all of these documents into folders. Five years after the release of that tablet, the company is unveiling a new product called the ReMarkable Paper Pro. It elevates the notepad experience while still prioritizing that distraction-free ethos.

    “We invented the category,” says Mats Herding Solberg, the head of product management at the Norwegian company. “We are focused literally on focus and making a single product that’s really good on the verticals that we believe are important. We don’t want to be the company that goes super broad and tries to add too many bells and whistles.”

    Paper Trail

    Tablet propped up with a magnetic stylus attached to the side and handwritten notes on the screen

    Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

    ReMarkable’s Paper Pro isn’t strictly a successor to the ReMarkable 2. Think of it like how the “Pro” version of the iPhone aligns to the standard model. It has some nice upgrades at a higher price starting at $579, but you can stick with the $399 older model if you don’t need the new features; it’s not going away anytime soon.

    So what’s new? The highlight is color. At CES 2024, E Ink—the company that produces many of the electronic paper displays found in Kindles and the like—showed off more devices than ever using color E Ink technology. This list now includes the new ReMarkable Paper Pro, though Solberg says ReMarkable has done a lot of work on top of E Ink’s technology to perfect the color experience. The custom “Canvas Color” display stack is comprised of physical color particles that move around the screen to show specific colors, rather than a separate filter on top of the black and white display. Solberg says this should better replicate the actual feeling of “color on paper.”

    Don’t expect vivid, bright colors like you see on your smartphone’s screen. These hues are still muted, and you can only choose from nine colors (from magenta to cyan), but you can blend and layer them together, which can then create even more color options.

    Overhead view of a tablet with handdrawn 3D perspective floating blocks on the screen and a stylus resting beside the tablet

    Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

    Also new is a front light system. It’s different than the backlight typical of phone screens. Instead, a front light angles the light source down onto the tablet’s screen so it’s reflected up at your eyes. This is a design that’s become pretty standard over the years in the world of e-paper devices. The ReMarkable 2 only reflects ambient light, which makes it difficult to see the screen in a dark room. This isn’t a problem with the Paper Pro. You can adjust the brightness of the light, though it’s still not going to get eye-searingly bright. Just enough that you can use it in dim conditions.

    The Paper Pro has a larger 11.8-inch display, which means none of the old accessories for the ReMarkable 2 will work on this unit. That’s why there are an array of folio covers ($89 and up) at launch to support the new device, along with a Type Folio cover ($229) that adds a keyboard. Even the stylus has been rebuilt. The Marker/Marker Plus are active styli, so they need to be charged—just pop ’em on the edge of the Paper Pro, where they will magnetically attach and start wirelessly charging.

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  • The Daylight Tablet Returns Computing to Its Hippie Ideals

    The Daylight Tablet Returns Computing to Its Hippie Ideals

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    “Do you mind if I hug you?” asks Anjan Katta. This is not the usual way to wrap up a product demo, but given the product and its creator, I wasn’t really surprised. Katta, a shaggy-haired, bearded fellow, he’d shown up to the WIRED office in San Francisco dressed like he was embarking on a summertime mountaintop trek. He had immediately began rhapsodizing about the idealistic early days of personal computers and the amazing figures who produced that magic, knowledge he gathered in part through my writings. And he seemed like the hugging type.

    The device Katta pulls out of his backpack—an electronic-ink-style tablet called the Daylight DC1—is very much a reflection of its creator, a spiritual object driven more by ideals than commerce. “It’s almost trying to bring back the hippie into personal computing,” he says, bemoaning the loss of that spirit. “It’s been replaced by shareholders—what’s happened to that bicycle-for-the-mind idealism?” Katta’s device wants to put us back in that saddle, pulling us out of the mire of unsatisfying empty interactions with our phones and junky apps. All he has to conquer is Apple, Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, TikTok, and a public unlikely to take a monochrome gadget that costs more than $700 out for a spin. No wonder he needs a hug.

    Alan Kay, the visionary who imagined the way we’d use portable digital devices, once said that Apple’s Macintosh was the first computer worth criticizing. I think Katta wants to make the first computer worth meditating with. He hopes to join the ranks of early tech heroes by stipulating what Daylight doesn’t do—multitasking, mind-numbing eye candy, or distracting floods of notifications.

    Courtesy of Daylight Computer Co.

    Instead, the sharp “Live Paper” display quietly refreshes, a page at a time. (Katta’s team worked up its own PDF rending scheme.) The accompanying Wacom pencil lets users scrawl comments and doodles on its surface as easily as they do on their latest Field Notes memo book. Web browsing in monochrome may not have pizzazz, but it seems to lower one’s blood pressure. Daylight strives to be the Criterion Collection of computer hardware, making everything else look like The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.

    To fully understand the Daylight device, look to Katta’s own origin story. He describes himself as “a very ADHD person who’s been a dilettante his entire life.” He was born in Ireland, where his parents had emigrated from India, and then the family moved to a small mining town in Canada. Katta couldn’t speak English well, so he learned about the world from books his father read to him. Even after the family moved to Vancouver and Katta became more socially deft—and discovered an entrepreneurial streak—he retained that wonder. He loved science, games, and books about early computer history. The only college he applied to was Stanford, because it symbolized to him the creativity of Silicon Valley people like Atari cofounder Nolan Bushnell. “It was the place where mischief makers were doing cool stuff,” he says. “Stanford was the place where I’d finally be accepted.”

    But during the years Katta attended Stanford—2012 to 2016—he became disillusioned. “I expected irreverence and innovation, but it felt like McKinsey-Goldman Sachs banker energy, because you could get rich that way,” he says. While his peers did internships at Google and Facebook, Katta spent summers climbing Kilimanjaro and trekking to Everest base camp. He loved to hang out at the Computer History Museum in nearby Mountain View, soaking up the tales of the early PC pioneers and being appalled by how the narrative of tech had shifted from charming geeks to rapacious bros.

    “What happened to everything I read in those books?” he says. “After graduation I was like, Fuck this, and went backpacking for two years.” He wound up back in his parents’ Vancouver basement, massively depressed. Katta stewed for months, reading about science—and fixating on how our devices had turned into what he saw as engines of misery. “They are dopamine slot machines and make us the worst versions of ourselves,” he says.

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