

🖋️ Write like it’s paper, work like it’s magic.
The reMarkable 2 is a cutting-edge 10.3" digital notepad featuring a high-resolution 226 DPI CANVAS display with ultra-low latency and a glare-free surface. Designed to replicate the natural feel of pen on paper, it supports seamless note-taking, sketching, and reading. With Wi-Fi connectivity and handwriting-to-text conversion, it replaces traditional notebooks and printouts, empowering professionals to organize and access their work effortlessly across devices.






| ASIN | B077NSWLH2 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #24,110 in Computers ( See Top 100 in Computers ) #40 in eWriters |
| Item model number | RM102 |
| Manufacturer | reMarkable |
| Package Dimensions | 30.73 x 20.83 x 3.56 cm; 350 g |
A**N
New level
Very good and useful
M**M
Brilliant Product!!!
It's kind of a very helpful tool for daily use... I recommend it strongly!!!
A**A
Good
As per my expectations
K**N
I think if you can use a device like this at work, or in your life in general, you already know who you are. If you don't get it, that's ok, you're probably in the majority. I'm a pencil and paper person, but by no means a technophobe or luddite-- I've used PDA's and smart phones long before the iPhone and Android made their introductions and became the devices for the masses. I've read comments like "why not just use a cheap paper notebook?" But a paper notebook can't back itself up, can't be in multiple places at once (the reMarkable phone and desktop apps), can't convert itself to text and be shared by email. On paper you can't move text around the page or erase areas without eventually making a mess, as with paper. With reMarkable you can copy and paste on the page, expand or contract the size of the selection or even rotate it. On a single device you can create as many notebooks as needed for different subjects or projects and you wouldn't need to find a way to lug it all around with you or I suppose organize it in a large binder with tabs. It can be your multiple notebooks, your task lists, your weekly-monthly-yearly planner, and all of it organized by project, goal or subject, any way you choose. You can also import articles you haven't had time to read yet through the reMarkable app, throw in some cooking recipes to try, music sheets or chords for practice later, it's endless. This isn't a tablet like a Surface Pro or Ipad with Evernote or OneNote. I know there's a place for software like Evernote or OneNote to use for reference materials and notes but this use can also get out of hand when it becomes filled with images, pastings and web clippings-- to the point it can almost be overwhelming and make focusing and thinking more difficult, expanding into disorganization rather than helping you distill information into well-defined ideas. You don't need a reMarkable to do that but it is nice to get away from the clutter, distractions and notifications on a typical tablet. Some of the real pluses, especially compared to paper notebooks: It backs itself up to cloud, you don't have to do anything, it's already done for you. It can be in viewed in multiple places at once (on your phone, your desktop, laptop, Chromebook etc.). It can convert your handwriting to text. Notes can be instantly and easily shared to others by email You can create a notebook for each subject or project (without the burden of carrying multiple notebooks or a large binder around) You can organize your notebooks and other files and have this visual display of all your information, grouped into folders if wanted, or just sorted by note book name or file name, date last updated or by size. Btw... the reMarkable android app works great on my Chromebook. Some things I wouldn't mind seeing in future updates: A split screen to have two files open simultaneously. Full support for customizing templates (you can actually do this now to an extent) Copy and pasting, to new pages or notebooks Some desktop app feature to print direct to PDF and send immediately to the tablet. These are just some things that appeal to me. I'm not artistic enough to go into the drawing and sketching capabilities of the reMarkable. It works fine for me for doodles and diagrams. Maybe someday I'll advance to using the multiple layers capability but I'm not there yet. And there are other capabilities that I have not used yet like importing e-books, the LiveView connection to your desktop and probably some things I'm not aware of.
T**R
Great way to save paper.
E**Y
At $599 this is not a slam dunk purchase, but neither is that price a deal breaker. It depends on what you want to use it for. I wanted it to sketch out ideas when planning applications, table structures, processes, etc. That kind of thing is a total pain with normal software. With plain paper it is ok until you want to make a change, then it is often easier to grab a blank sheet of paper and redo the current diagram than bother erasing, etc. The reMarkable makes this easy. Write on it as you would normal paper, and if you change your mind, you can easily erase small or large sections and redo it without starting over. For that I love it. It also handles PDF and ePub books, but it is a bit slower at it than I would like. Reading - fine. Annotating - fine. Researching - forget it. It takes too long to navigate through large books to find what you are looking for. The software is ok. In some areas it excels. The available pen/pencil types, thicknesses, eraser types, etc. are easy to use. Adding a new sheet can be tricky if you are switching in and out of landscape mode. I cannot tell you how many times in just 2 weeks I've added a new template and the lines were going up/down the page because even though I was in landscape mode, I somehow chose a portrait mode template. It really became useful with the mid-2019 update that allows rearranging pages and moving pages between notebooks. You can share notebooks via email in PDF format, which is good, but you cannot share pages. It has to be the entire notebook. So if you want to share meeting notes you took, you can copy those pages to a new notebook and share that. I have no complaints about the hardware. The tablet itself is solid, the pen works great, and the battery life, while not as good as I'd have thought with an e-ink screen with no back-light, it is certainly manageable as long as you make sure you don't go on a trip without a charger.
A**E
Exceptionnel!! Encore plus satisfaite qu’attendu! Ultra légère elle est d’une précision d’écriture impressionnante!
M**R
ITS NOT PAPPER
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago