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mholm | 3 months ago
I think ReMarkable is wasting a TON of potential at their price/form factor/ux. A device can be powerful without sacrificing simplicity and singularity of purpose.
mholm | 3 months ago
I think ReMarkable is wasting a TON of potential at their price/form factor/ux. A device can be powerful without sacrificing simplicity and singularity of purpose.
pseufaux|3 months ago
I was thinking about picking one up and giving it a shot.
ryanckulp|3 months ago
looks like reMarkable runs linux so in theory our OSS lib would do the trick: https://github.com/usetrmnl/trmnl-display
which can then point to one of several OSS server clients we offer: https://docs.usetrmnl.com/go/diy/byos#implementations
mholm|2 months ago
Zambyte|3 months ago
tpoacher|3 months ago
I was trying to find an e-ink tablet, amazon kept recommending me the magic notepad from xppen. It looked good, but I wasn't sure what that cryptic "x-paper display" was. The wording is just vague enough to make you think it's an e-paper display, without committing to that detail.
It took going through comments to find out that it's not an e-ink display.
The Daylight computer seem like that too. So what do you think of the display? Is it just another LED screen, or does it approach e-ink in any way?
fragmede|3 months ago
hagbard_c|3 months ago
[1] s/Keyboard/Touch Screen/
mholm|3 months ago
Gormo|3 months ago
cyberax|3 months ago
It doesn't support non-Latin languages, not even having a keyboard for them. Its handwriting recognition barely works, and it lacks a good system to organize notes.
The hardware is awesome, but their software is terrible.