I got a XP-Pen Deco Fun: Deco Fun Graphics Digital Drawing Tablet|XP-PEN Drawing Tablet. I used a stylus to write formulas on the tablet at the same time the notes will sync on the computer. Besides, it can annotate and comment on the Word, PowerPoint and OneNote with handwriting technology. It really can do many things with inexpensive price device. Of course, I also learn to sketch and draw for fun.

I found this Youtube video which mentions how the maker uses Obsidian and the reMarkable 2 to journal and how to copy the notes from the reMarkable to Obsidian using the reMarkable function to export a notebook to text and then manually copy these into Obsidian. Most of the video focus on the Obsidian part the reMarkable part is in the first part of the video.


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I am currently in my 1st year (out of 3) in technical high school, and I really enjoy taking (a LOT of) notes with a pencil. The only problem that I have with my current notepad is that I have a hard time navigating it when looking for notes I made earlier in the year, also I don't want to structure it with a set section of pages for certain subjects since it doesn't really work well with me. Furthermore we do a lot of problem solving work, which often requires quick sketches, that need to be saved on a computer so that it can later be used in reports, therefore we often end up using msPaint...

I am therefore wondering if it would be worth it for me to get a remarkable 2 for doing these things, since it can sync up with the cloud and I can share my sketches with my classmates and so on, from what i've gathered at least. I most likely intend to continue studying after high school so i think it might be a long term investment.

TL;DR

I take a lot of notes for school, and do a lot of sketching, and I have a hard time navigating all of this, so would it be a good idea to buy a remarkable 2 or would it be a waste of cash?

You're probably asking: Why not just use an iPad and an Apple Pencil? That's a fine method for taking notes, but the iPad has some downsides. For one, the glass screen doesn't provide the same type of paper-like friction. But also, it's hard to stay focused when your favorite mobile game or Netflix show is just a few taps away. I think an iPad can be a great tool for note-taking, especially if you invest in a screen protector with a paperlike feel. But an iPad can be risky if, like me, you lack self-control.

Once you turn on cloud sync, your notes are automatically backed up to reMarkable's proprietary cloud service. You can access the files via dedicated desktop and mobile apps. That's all fine, except that you don't have another backup option. No Google Drive, no Evernote, no Dropbox. Just the addition of yet another ecosystem to your already scattered work life.

One intriguing thing about the reMarkable 2 is its handwriting-to-text conversion, which turns your written scribbles into digital letter forms that can be edited on the tablet and shared as an email. It works in left- or right-handed modes and supports 33 different languages. I regret to inform you that it is ... not great. It does an OK job recognizing my hybrid cursive-print scribbles, but it fails often enough that my notes need significant editing before I can forward them along.

You can use the reMarkable 2 for ebooks, but only ePUB files without digital rights management restrictions. The device also lacks page-turn buttons. So even though you can write notes in the margins of books, reading books is clearly not the tablet's primary function. The Kindle is still the better option for that.

There's something charming, admirable even, about what reMarkable has created: a dedicated note-taking device for dedicated note-takers. I can see it now ... me, at an airport, working Very Hard. Me, at a coffee shop, taking notes during a meeting, politely smiling at strangers that clearly want to ask me what device it is I'm using. Me, five years into the future, breaking out the tablet, showing my editor my notes as I'm working out the details of a book deal.

I have been struggling to truly adopt my Remarkable tablet for well over a year now. I constantly try but end up bouncing between paper and the tablet. My main issue with Remarkable is going back and finding notes. It's so much easier on paper for some reason, I can just flip faster I guess.

Having had a Livescribe pen years and years ago which did allow you to search your handwritten notes, no OCR was needed. The app was smart enough to find words in your actual handwritten notes was the greatest thing about it. I miss that incredibly with the Remarkable tablet.

Anyway, I say all of that to ask if anyone is aware of any similar workflow or way I could leverage my Remarkable notes in a similar fashion. Basically feed ChatGPT my handwritten notes from the Remarkable tablet or app, and then be able to ask it to summarize or find things in the notes to improve searching?

I'm a network engineer for a MSP. My notes are usually action items from meetings of things I need to do or look into. Dates for projects and deadlines I need to remember and so on. But like I've said the tablet fails me when it comes to referring back to old notes. Flipping through digital pages is a chore and you can't search them without I guess converting everything through OCR which also feels like a chore. It's just so much easier to flip through a regular notebook to spot what your looking for.

Any tips, advice or guidance on this? I keep hoping to see some app improvements that would allow the searching of handwritten notes but that doesn't seem to be on their radar. So maybe ChatGPT could be leveraged in some way but I'm not finding anything specific that exists for that yet. Thought maybe I'd ask the community what others may be doing with regards to this.

I am a notorious note-taker. Over the years, I've learned not to rely solely on my (or anyone else's) memory but to create well structured, concise, and adequately labeled notes for future use. It's not only required to preserve the knowledge, but it helps you develop some valuable abilities & skills, e.g.:

Needless to say, good hardware is crap w/o decent software (on the device). Surprisingly reMarkable 2 doesn't shine here. Tablet's software is very minimalistic (which is not an issue per se) - you can read e-books and make notes, but the software doesn't do much to improve/expand the experience:

That's a big disappointment. But I believe that CAN be fixed; the potential is still there. The device's essential features - high responsiveness, remarkable accuracy, and low latency times - are there: confirmed and unquestionable.

I honestly can't tell at this point. In time I will know whether the friction is small enough and the convenience is high enough that I'll be (by default) reaching for reMarkable 2 to make notes. I think it is the MOST probable in scenarios when I'm sitting with someone trying to explain something visually. Still, I can't imagine using it for a larger group brainstorm - the space is too little, and handing the marker would probably be too irritating.

E-readers tend to be smaller than size and focus only on the experience of reading a book or PDF. E Ink tablets offer e-reading features but also include the ability to use a stylus to write notes in a digital notebook and/or in the margins of PDFs and ebooks. Since handwriting is integral to the E Ink tablet experience, the devices themselves tend to be bigger in order to more closely approximate the size of a sheet of paper.

E Ink tablets are best suited for people who enjoy writing notes or sketching by hand and who need to read and markup lots of PDF or DRM-free ebooks. They could be a particularly good fit for students, lawyers or any other professional in need of a digital, distraction-free note-taking device.

The ReMarkable 2 is the best E Ink tablet for students who love to take lots of handwritten notes. It is only 0.19 inch thick and 0.88 pound, which makes it light and easy to carry in your backpack.This 10.3-inch tablet uses a monochrome digital display with a resolution of 226 DPI. The writing and text looks clear and sharp, and you can choose from over 40 different page templates for notes, including seven options just for musical notation. The software is easy to use, with clear buttons at the top for you to add notebooks and folders. It has 8GB of internal storage and now includes handwriting conversion and Google Drive, Dropbox and OneDrive integration. Those services used to be part of ReMarkable's Connect subscription, but are now included for free with every device. The Connect subscription itself still exists, but now costs $3 a month instead of $8. It offers a ReMarkable 2 protection plan, along with unlimited cloud storage and the ability to add notes in your notebooks when you're on mobile and desktop devices.

The ReMarkable 2 also shines with PDFs. Highlights automatically straighten themselves and turn a legible shade of gray without any needed adjustment. You can add pages to PDFs for extra notes or write in the margins with ease. The ReMarkable's thinness, two-week battery life, pen input and PDF management capabilities made this E Ink tablet my favorites.  ff782bc1db

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