Morning. Abi has ordered an Amazon Kindle Scribe and expecting delivery ? 📕📚
@Munish I’m an avid reader on Kindle. Much prefer it over reading in my iPad. Having said that, I’m not seeing a reason to upgrade from my Oasis.
@pratik I love my Remarkable. I haven't used my Pencil on the iPad much since I have it. Also for reading epubs and pdfs it's really good.
@pratik Sanna and I are happy reMarkable owners. It's not for everyone, but an excellent tool for us. Sanna wrote down her impressions after using it for three months. The original text is in Swedish, but Google does an okay job with the translation.
@sod Do you ever use the reMarkable for reading full length books? Is the size/weight a little too much for that as a primary use case?
@pratik @Munish I have an Apple Pencil but only use it occasionally, to take notes at a community association that meets face-to-face. And I've resigned from that group.
I recently bought an iPad mini, after dithering it would be a waste of money, because I already had a 2018 iPad AND a 2020 iPad Air. But I'm glad I did it. It seems like the perfect size. @Mtt
@Mtt Absolutely! If you define full-length as a piece with hundreds of pages. Mostly books suitable for the larger E Ink screen: rich in illustrations, tables, diagrams, and so on. Like programming literature and other non-fiction.
Science papers, magazines, comics, and manga also work well. For regular novels, I usually reach for my Kobo, which is closer to pocket format.
@sod Thanks. For me, it’s mostly typical novel reading. My guy says the Oasis is where I should stay, but the shiny new thing is always tempting.
@sod Thanks a lot. That was a great review. My use is mostly to read ebooks I borrow from our public library (currently use Libby on my iPad Mini) followed by annotating PDFs and taking notes & doodling. How easy is it to get ebooks on there especially Kindle ones.
@pratik Oasis is great but over priced. I got mine on sale and stacked it with a trade in and AmEx offer.
@Mtt Yeah, I'm with your guy. A reMarkable will not add additional value if you're solely reading novels. You're better off with the Oasis.
@pratik Annotating, taking notes & doodling is the primary use case and where it shines. Getting DRM-free ebooks and PDFs on the reMarkable is easy. On Apple devices, you install the app and get a send to reMarkable option in the share sheet.
For locked-down books, you must get rid of the DRM first. It's relatively straightforward with Calibre and DeDRM_tools but much more involved than borrowing a book via Libby on an iPad. And you might commit a crime when circumventing the DRM protection, depending on the laws where you live. 🦹
@sod Cool. Unfortunately, that will not work for me. I guess I'm better off with a Kindle device or using an iPad. I'm afraid I won't use reMarkable's annotating, taking notes & doodling features as much as I think I want to.
@pratik @Mtt @sod I wish I did not look at this conversation again 🤦🏽♂️. This is why, I have an iPad pro with pencil, used it for several years. I take handwriting notes (although I switch between many apps to both read and highlight, from Kindle app, Notes app, Goodnotes, Paper, Nebo etc). Reading all your comments, I am thinking, do i need to (want to), get a kindle scribe, to focus the note taking. Loving tech is a pain.
@annahavron @annahavron @Mtt @sod @pratik Thanks for sharing. Interestingly, it seems the Scribe is most likely going to be the best for "value" for money etc and are pretty good with customer service, returns etc on their own products.
@annahavron That would probably be how I used it. Not much of a digital handwriting note taker type.
@annahavron Like @munish, I'm also strongly getting the Scribe coz reading it my primary purpose (as long as I can highlight text in addition to annotating) and have not yet used the writing feature on any eInk device so I'm not looking for perfect.
@Munish Well, I don't have those so the temptation is even stronger @annahavron
@pratik @munish Hmmm. Justification. Let's reframe this in what for me is a more liberating way of thinking about these matters.
We have a household budget. Within that budget, my husband and I each have a monthly allotment of Fun Money, no questions asked. My husband's Fun Money periodically goes to amps. Why does he buy yet another amp? One has this kind of foot pedal; one works better outdoors... I don't know... and even better, I don't care. It's his Fun Money.
Anna's Fun Money, now, never goes to amps. Anna's Fun Money tends to go to analog office supplies, and the occasional electronic device.
So I ask not whether it is justified to get the Scribe even though I have a similar device. I ask whether my Fun Money fund can afford it yet. And... probably not, because I've got my eye on something else. But if my Fun Money can afford it, that's all the justification I need.