![]() You can get by without this, but more on that later. Oh, and the cloud-sharing Connect platform used to be free, but is now subscription-based, so you may be looking at an ongoing cost of £4 or £6 a month. You can buy it directly from reMarkable 2 for £339 delivered, and you’ll need to spend an extra £59/£109 for a Marker or Marker Plus stylus unless you only want to use the reMarkable 2 for reading. Given the low power requirements and the subsequent weak internals (a 1.2GHz dual-core ARM processor backed by 1GB of RAM), the price of the reMarkable 2 may cause you to do a quick double take. reMarkable 2 review: Price and competition ![]() ![]() That obviously means fewer trees cut down for paper, and while you’d shy away from calling any consumer tech good for the planet, it does at least reduce your need to keep buying notepads if you’re a prestigious note-taker. The company estimates that the reMarkable 2’s 8GB of internal storage will hold 100,000 pages of written work, or around 500 paper notebooks, and that doesn’t include pages safely stored in the cloud. It’s not waterproof, but hey: neither is paper.Īs well as the ability to sync your notes, there’s another benefit here. It connects to your computer locally or (optionally via a subscription) to Dropbox, Google Drive and reMarkable’s own cloud service for file storage, so that all your notes can be easily accessed across your hardware. The reMarkable 2 is the answer to this, theoretically combining the best of both worlds with a digital surface that feels like paper for your note-taking and doodles. On the other hand, paper can be an administrative nightmare: if half your notes are digital and the other half are scattered between notepads, then you’re going to lose something. But not everyone is: typing can be slow and noisy, and isn’t ideal if you need to draw a diagram on the fly. reMarkable 2 review: What you need to knowĪs someone whose claim to legible handwriting has withered on the vine after decades of underuse, I’m quite comfortable with the transition to digital note-keeping. It’s a deliberately stripped-back offering, so does the reMarkable 2 do its one job well enough to justify the admittedly high price of entry? Let’s find out. It connects to Wi-Fi, but that’s only so that your notes can be wirelessly shared for easy access elsewhere. M1 Apple iPad Pro (2021) review: A display of brillianceĪ monochrome E Ink tablet that’s purely designed for note-taking, the reMarkable 2 has a panel built to mimic the feel of paper, but it doesn’t come with Netflix, Instagram or email.
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