![]() The SN’s are nice, but a little laggy and not as intuitive for productivity. For now, the RM2 has the edge in productivity. Amazon put some horsepower into this device. The latency on the Scribe is super low - it’s downright snappy in every way, much more so than the Kindle Paperwhites I have had. Writing on the Scribe is somewhere between the high-friction pencil-like feel of the RM2 and the low-friction gel pen feel of the SN - the middle ground felt-tip or Sharpie feel is just right for me. Another limitation is folder organization you can create folders to put notebooks in, but you cannot create subfolders within those folder (“Archives” anyone?). What is said above about not being able to lasso and move text around in a Scribe notebook is true, and it’s a major productivity limitation. I have a Remarkable2 and a Supernote AX5 and AX6. So far, it's a bit limited comparatively - but very good. Scribe has fewer pen options, fewer templates, inability to completely hide the tool bar (only collapse) and unable move it somewhere else on screen other than left vs. The actual hardware performance is noticeably faster than the remarkable when it comes to creating notebooks, typing on the onscreen keyboard etc. I had the same experience with the Boox devices, you get used to it after a little while but jumping from RM2 it's a bit different. There is a slightly perceivable gap between the screen and frontlight layer. For my preference, the smallest setting is a bit too thin, and the next size up a bit too thick. pencil and I wish there were a few more options for pen thickness. Scribe writing feels a bit smoother - like a sharpie vs. I'm extremely picky about the pen latency and returned my supernote and boox note air 2 because of the very slight latency compared to RM2. The pen latency is on par with the remarkable. I just got my scribe and comparing it to my RM2.
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