![]() So for Kindle users, the Scribe is potentially a nice upgrade. If reading is your primary need, then the longhand annotations are a welcome replacement for the Kindle PW/Oasis finger QWERTY input. Amazon did not develop the Scribe for people who have no interest in their ecosystem - the store is what will make the Scribe profitable. Kindles are for access to the Amazon store first and foremost. Why? Using your device primarily for paperless workflow is not what the device is for. I have my doubts Amazon will invest in the functionality serious note takers require. As a primary note taking focused device?. I think Amazon is multiple years away from having something that competes with the Remarkable from a dedicated notebook standpoint. the experience is really geared towards being a kindle reader and store first, which it’s great at by the way.Īll in all, looking forward to my Remarkable getting here and returning the Scribe. clunky and slow to get to notes and no shortcuts. I also keep finding that I can’t write for some reason and it’s because it thinks I’m trying to touch the screen with my finger. the screensaver time out is not adjustable and is way too short, making it annoying to use as a reference when you’re working on another device wanting to see your notes at the same time no tilt or pressure sensitivity I have been able to experience Just a single color/shade pen with a few widths and a single color/shade highlighter writing experience is very nice in terms of lack of any lag and feel on the screen ![]() Turns out, Amazon put ZERO effort into the software functionality of the Scribe as a notepad replacement. I also ordered a Remarkable that hasn’t arrived yet. I got a Scribe because I like the idea of Amazon’s customer service and thought they could do something great with their money behind it. ![]()
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