Using Two ReMarkables
30 points by breezykermo a day ago | 6 comments
  • yzydserd a day ago |
    I’ve been doing similar!

    Study notes on one. Exercise notepad on the other.

  • skavi a day ago |
    The people yearn for the Microsoft Courier [0].

    [0]: https://youtu.be/UmIgNfp-MdI

  • nxobject 20 hours ago |
    It’s worth mentioning that, in Star Trek’s universe, tables were routinely covered in PADDs - not because it’s excessive, but that even with eink the most usable environment was multiple virtual sheets of paper at once.
  • exe34 20 hours ago |
    when I'm reading something on my pinenote, I often have a copy open on my laptop (or rarely phone) to look at coloured diagrams but also just to refer to figures without having to switch back and forth. I only take notes in emacs though, having realised that my lifelong dream of digital handwritten notes was just a bit less than practical.
  • Locutus_ 19 hours ago |
    I'm a heavy ReMarkable user, mostly as a note taking device when doing client meetings.

    For personal use I use it a lot for annotating philosophy papers and source materials, and the lack of a split screen feature is extremely frustrating.

    Writing annotations or commentaries on texts means writing in the margins or switching back and forth between books (often a paper book and the remarkable for writing, or 2 notebooks in the device which is a slow operation).

    A split screen mode would have been extremely useful, or lacking that a method for having a page-matched 'fold-out' so I can just associate a full blank page to each source page for my commentary.

    I know there's an unofficial hack that adds this, but why ReMarkable doesn't I can't fathom, especially as annotations and such are marketed as primary use cases for the device.

    /rant :)

  • nunez 16 hours ago |
    I haven't been as excited about technology in a very long time as I have upon discovering eInk devices this year.

    Most of my Internet usage is skimfeed/Hacker News and the occasional jaunt on Reddit. I've also gotten back into books given how parasitic the Internet has become writ large.

    The iPad Pro is overkill for this use case, and its screen is harsh on the eyes (unless you use it in what I call "red mode", i.e. dark mode with a 100% red filter overlay).

    Given this, I wanted an eReader that I could read articles on the Internet with.

    The Kindle nails the first part, but its web browser sucks all sorts of shit.

    Enter the BOOX Go Color 7. This thing is exactly what I wanted: a super-capable eReader that's easy on the eyes and small enough to fit in my bum bag. It sucks at videos and is kind of slow, which makes it a slam dunk for my narrow use case.

    This inspired me to get a reMarkable 2 for keeping track of customer notes (I'm a sales engineer at the moment) and journal my work when I'm hacking on stuff. Loads of people have gushed over how much better this is than an iPad for writing; they are 100% correct. Having a paper feel is everything. No good solutions exist for this on an iPad, but it's totally possible with eInk displays.

    The rM2 inspired me even further to ditch my iOS weightlifting journal app (Strong) for a Go Color 10.3.

    I've used all sorts of apps for this purpose over the years (Google Sheets, then JEFIT, then Hevy, then Strong). Since there isn't an open standard for weightlifting logs (lol; can you imagine), all of these have different data schemas that you need to normalize yourself. Gigantic pain in the ass. For this reason, logging reps and sets is so much easier on paper, but I hated keeping track of paper notebooks.

    This is the perfect replacement. No futzing around on an app, and I can leave my phone at home. It spends nearly 0% battery when its off and barely anything when its on. I can put this in a soft case and leave it in my gym bag for weeks at a time. I even have Kindle and Firefox on this too so I can read books during rest periods. It's incredible.

    These days, my iPad Pro is only good for being a HDMI and macOS Sidecar monitor.

    Yes, Onyx refuses to comply with the GPL and has super duper shady stuff pre-installed in their BOOX devices. ONYX is also the only manufacturer that's putting serious money into this niche. Root them, install AFWall+, install AdAway, don't connect your Google account; problem solved.

    (One last positive I'll mention for the reMarkable: the RM1 and RM2 come with SSH and are rooted out of the box. It even uses systemd to run Xochitl, its frontend. You can hack the living daylights out of these things if you're into that.)