








🖋️ Kindle Scribe: Where your ideas meet the future of reading and writing.
The Amazon Kindle Scribe (64 GB) combines a premium 10.2” 300 ppi Paperwhite display with a precision Premium Pen, enabling users to read, write, annotate, and convert handwritten notes to text. Featuring AI notebook tools, expansive battery life lasting up to 12 weeks for reading and 3 weeks for writing, and seamless document markup capabilities, it’s designed for professionals who demand a sleek, distraction-free digital workspace.
| Display | Amazon's 10.2” Paperwhite display technology with built-in light, 300 ppi, optimized font technology, 16-level gray scale. |
| Size | Device: 7.7” x 9.0 x .22 (196 x 230 x 5.8mm excluding feet) Premium Pen: 6.4” x .35” x .33” (162 x 8.8 x 8.4 mm). |
| On-Device Storage | 16 GB, 32 GB, or 64 GB. |
| Weight | Device: 15.3oz (433g device only). Actual size and weight may vary by configuration and manufacturing process. Premium Pen: .53oz (15g) |
| Wi-Fi Connectivity | Supports 2.4 GHz and 5.0 GHz networks with support for WEP, WPA, WPA2 and WPA3 security using password authentication or Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS). Does not support connecting to ad-hoc (or peer-to-peer) Wi-Fi networks. |
| Content Formats Supported | Kindle Format 8 (AZW3), Kindle (AZW), TXT, PDF, unprotected MOBI, PRC natively; PDF, DOCX, DOC, HTML, EPUB, TXT, RTF, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP through conversion; Audible audio format (AAX). Learn more about supported file types for personal documents. |
| Accessibility Features | VoiceView screen reader, available over Bluetooth audio, provides spoken feedback allowing you to navigate your device and read books with text-to-speech (available in English only). Kindle Scribe also includes the ability to invert black and white, adjust font size, font face, line spacing and margins. Learn more about Accessibility for Kindle. |
| Warranty and Service | 1-year limited warranty and service included. Optional 1-year, 2-year or 3-year Extended Warranty available for U.S customers sold separately. Use of Kindle is subject to the terms found here. |
| Setup Technology | Amazon Wi-Fi simple setup automatically connects to your home Wi-Fi network. Learn more about Wi-Fi simple setup. |
| System Requirements | None; fully wireless and doesn't require a computer to download content. |
| Included in the Box | Includes wifi-enabled Kindle Scribe, Basic or Premium Pen, USB-C charging cable, 5 replacement tips, tip replacement tool, and built-in rechargeable battery. |
| Generation | Kindle Scribe 1st generation - 2022 release. |
| Battery Life | For reading, a single charge lasts up to 12 weeks based on a half hour of reading per day, with wireless off and the light setting at 13. For writing, a single charge lasts up to 3 weeks based on a half hour period of writing per day, with wireless off and the light setting at 13. Battery life will vary and may be reduced based on usage and other factors such as Audible audiobook streaming and annotating content. |
| Charge Time | Fully charges in approximately 7 hours from a computer via USB-C cable; or fully charges in approximately 2.5 hours with a 9W USB-C power adapter. |
| Documentation | Learn more about Kindle devices with our Quick Start Guide and Kindle User Guide. |
| Available Color | Tungsten. |
| Software Updates | Learn more about these software security updates. If you already own a Kindle, visit Manage Your Content and Devices for information specific to your device. |
L**E
Wonderful
I’ve had my scribe for a few weeks now and while I rarely write reviews, thought I would for this since I’ve had kindles since they came out. First, I’ve had kindles hd and the paperwhite and while I like the paperwhite better for my eyes, I’ve not found one I consistently used one, since the kindle DX (which only recently died), because the screens were so small. I have trouble with my eyes and need to enlarge the print, so the small kindles really don’t work as well for me. That said, I still have a kindle hd with my scribe. I haven’t tried the website on the scribe — I don’t see it — and I like to be able to look things up based on what I read as I’m reading so that is an advantage to the hd. I’ll have to see about the web browser on the scribe when I find it (I missed the return date on the hd too, so that’s why I have it. I love the larger size of the scribe. This and the pencil are what really sold me. I feel like I have my dx back (off only it had cellular!!!), my favorite kindle ever. It allows me to enlarge the font based on how my eyes feel, which is great when I pass the 3 hour mark. I also love the ability to change the screen from grey to a warmer color. I am one who prefers warmer colors to cool colors, so that’sa nice thing they added. What I most like is the ability to take handwritten notes and to have the notes you’ve taken across books collected together into one notebook. I need to play with this more, but I’ma writer, so this feature is amazing for me for many reason. I start with a vague idea that different books not necessarily having anything to do with each other May actually be put together to form a premise, so to have mother from those books smushed together is incredibly helpful. That’s basically how I would organize my hard paper research. I don’t know if this is possible but if not, this would be a great update, and that is to create collections of notes in different notebooks, to create a collection of books and then have a notebook within that collection with all the notes for the books in that collection. That would be pretty easy to code. Finally the pencil. I love it. I love it so much better for writing than my Apple Pencil. I feel like I’m writing on paper. It’s beautiful. I like the Apple Pencil for things like procreate and my scribe for taking notes. I’m left handed and I usually don’t have problems. Every now and then my palm will change it from a handwritten note to a text note, but it’s not a big deal. I use the pencil to tap on handwritten note and it puts me back. As a lefty you get used to dealing with these things. I’ve had worse problems trying to write in apps. I also tried the oasis. It was nice. It also worked with my eyes. The buttons for the pages was a nice added touch. It is small, but it makes great use of the real estate available on the page. I was a little frustrated because I twice ordered the cellular version and both times received the Wi-Fi version, so I gave up on the oasis and bought the scribe, which I hadn’t bought because it was Wi-Fi. I’m so glad I did. Aliso, I’m case you don’t know, you can change your kindle address to something simple like [email protected], so it’s easy to tell someone where to send documents or books to you (and easier to send things to yourself). If all you want to do is read books, the oasis is fabulous. If you like having things in color and want the ease of a quick Internet to research concepts you read about, the hd is great. If you like to research and like the idea of having your notes from different books collected in one notebook, or would appreciate a larger screen, or would enjoy a writing experience, the scribe is great. There’sa kindle out there to meet just about everyone’s needs. (I’m posting without proofing, so please forgive typos.)
E**D
Childhood dream come true!
There is only one con: it's not waterproof. It's 2025, why isn't waterproof technology the industry standard?? Anywho. This is hands down the single best purchase I have ever made. I've been dreaming of this ever since 1999 when I won a Game Boy off a Mountain Dew bottle top at a Thunder Skate USA facility. It came with a game called Wave Rider. It was because of that infuriating game that I realized my true nature- I'm a nerdy book worm to the core. Why couldn't this game be a book? The Kindle Scribe is a childhood dream come true! My favorite feature of this device is the notebooks. I have journaled since I was 8 years old. I'm now 35. Do you have any idea how difficult it is to keep nosy noses from rifling through your most private paper thoughts? I do. I had taken to burning my journals after filling them up. No need to literally hang on to my mind garbage. I have always had too many thoughts taking up space in my head, creating the need to jot them down and make them go away. Now, with the Scribe, I can click a button and the brain baggage is instantly destroyed. No more wasting paper (the poor trees!) No more searching (and stealing!) perfect pen to write with. The Scribe comes with the perfect pen! A forever pen! I got the basic pen. A basic pen for a basic... you know. The fountain pen feature is revolutionary! I've been "perfecting" my penmanship for decades and still write little better than a chicken's left foot. Woe is me and any who have to read my scratch. No more! The best part is that the ink never runs out, it always writes perfectly smooth. I also love how big this Kindle is. I'm blind as a butt in blue jeans, so this size is a huge plus for me. With my OG Kindle, setting the font to large yielded only a few sentences per page making me feel like I was back in pre school learning to read. No more! Other bonuses- I had signed up for a free month of Kindle Unlimited before ordering the Scribe. When I did order, it came with THREE months of free KU! A total of FOUR FREE MONTHS! But it got better. I ordered an OG Kindle for my mom (who is not as blind as a butt in blue jeans) and it came with another THREE MONTHS OF FREE KU! A grand total SEVEN MONTHS OF FREE KU! I was over the moon! I had also found it on sale (January of 2024) for $270. I put an $80 dollar gift card toward it and it brought my total down to $204! Woohoo! I ordered a fancy flippy pink adjustable magnetic cover for it separately. I am in love with this device. Never have issues with battery life or charging. I will say this though; I think the Scribe was marketed to the wrong demographic. I abhor writing on books, highlighting, dog-earing, and otherwise desecrating books, so I don't give a hoot in a hay storm about the sticky notes debacle other reviewers take issue with. I use this for pure entertainment purposes; sometimes I switch from reading to simply scribbling my brains out for the fun of it. Seriously. I have no idea if this is a good buy for work related tasks and I don't care. It's perfect for keeping track of what the one year old is eating, doodle notebooks for the nine year old, and reading and scribbling until there's drool pooling and crusting at the corners of my mouth for me. Like I said, it's a childhood dream come true! The only way I'd come off my Scribe is if they made a new one that is waterproof. Which reminds me- I got the software update of the new one! Thanks amazon! Seriously, best 200 bucks I've ever spent. A year of daily use and zero complaints (except the waterproof issue- grr *shakes fist*.) I can't recommend this enough. This is THE Cadillac of reading/ writing toys for adults!
A**3
Excellent New Device. Exceeds Expectations.
I struggled with the decision to purchase the new Kindle Scribe. I have had several kindles (going all the way back to the Kindle with a keyboard) and a few Kindle Fires. I currently have a Kindle Paperwhite and Fire 8 plus. I have always valued the reading experience on kindles along with the ability to have access to a library of books, obtain samples of books, and a convenient way to highlight and add sticky notes. I was initially excited to see the Scribe come out, but the price and some negative reviews really gave me pause. At the urging of my spouse as a Christmas present and convincing myself that I would return it if it didn’t meet my expectations I decided to take the plunge. I am so glad I did. It has exceeded my expectations in all three of my must haves. I decided to write this review in hopes of helping others going back and forth about whether to purchase it now or wait for a future update. As a little background, I am in academia. I decided that I would purchase and keep the Kindle Scribe if it did an excellent job with The following. 1) Able to read textbooks and technical books with tables, charts, graphs, and math. 2) Able to read pdfs. 3) Able to write notes (lecture notes, answer keys, personal research notes, etc.) Based upon the previous reviews, I was not confident that the Scribe would do a great job with all three of the above must haves. However, it does. I’ll take each one separately with my pros/cons and fixes. 1) With my previous kindles (including my current paperwhite and Fire), I was never able to have that wonderful reading experience when it came to textbooks and/or more technical books which included tables, charts, graphs, and math. The physical size of the previous kindles simply was never going to work well with these types of books, even with the zoom feature. The size, and perfection of the screen, of the Scribe makes reading these types of books just as enjoyable as reading a book of fiction. The technical stuff comes across wonderfully and there’s no funky formatting that the previous kindles would have when it comes to tables, charts, etc. So, the Scribe passed with flying colors when it come to this must have. In response to some other reviews, I will say that I’m actually glad that I cannot write (make notes, underline, circle) on the books themselves. I like writing a sticky note and highlighting because it keeps the pages less cluttered. Looking back at physical books that I’ve had to read many times over the years, I have written so many notes in the margins, underlined, etc. that it makes reading them again a pain. I hope that Amazon will always keep the option of sticky notes even if one day it allows writing directly on the book. Given the price, did I need the Scribe? No. I could’ve just continued to read these types of books as physical books. But, I am so glad that I can do it on the Scribe and have the wonderful kindle reading experience. My only complaint is that a few books purchased in the past don’t recognize the pen. This might just be an issue of needing to reformat all books and hopefully it will be fixed in the future. Even with those few books, I can still type sticky notes and highlight as before so it hasn’t bee a big deal. 2) Given the size of previous Kindles, sending a pdf and reading it just was never going to work well. The Scribe does a near perfect job. Now, having read some reviews, I was really worried about this must have. I read lots of pdfs from my laptop for my job, and as I sit reading look over to my Paperwhite and wish that I could use it instead (the E-ink is just so much better). Here’s my take on pdfs, if the pdf is nicely formatted to begin with then it comes across on the Scribe perfectly. Yes, you can write on it which is nice (kind of wish I could use sticky notes instead though) and easily export it to your email address. On the other hand, if the pdf is not nicely formatted and/or the text is a bit blurry to begin with, then it doesn’t come to the Scribe perfectly either of course. I have played around with preparing these troublesome pdfs by cropping or simply changing the margin size before sending and it seems to help, but the text is not as crisp. Still though, I can read the pdfs on the Scribe just as easily as reading them on my laptop. So, overall, the Scribe exceeded my expectations here. One strange thing I’ve come across is that when initially opening a pdf, it opens to a cover page so you have to actually go to the beginning by opening up the toolbar at the top then you can flip the pages. This is an example of needing to play around a bit with the Scribe to figure out some of the features. The entire focus on the “cover” thing in pdfs and notes seemed to be a big thing with the tech folks, might be a privacy issue they have in mind. I realize that some folks, myself included, use Google drive and other web-based options to store documents, but Amazon has done an excellent job of allowing the user to drag and drop a document into the Send to Kindle page/app (and, I make sure to choose the option to send only to my Scribe rather than clutter up all my devices). I have only tried one Word document so far but it came across perfectly on the Scribe. If you have a book pdf, you can simply write Chapter 1, 2, etc. on the page of each chapter then go to the notes to easily move to where you want to go. So, I have been extremely happy with this feature which would’ve been a deal breaker for me. 3) Others have said that writing on the Scribe feels nearly the same as writing on paper and it does. I plan to write lecture notes, answer keys, and just some notes for myself. Amazon has done a great job in allowing the notebooks to be easily sent to my email address as pdfs, and they come across on my laptop and Fire exactly has I’ve written them. I am really, really pleased with this aspect. In the past, I would scribble an answer key or some notes on a lecture (including Graphs and math) on some scrap paper then a year later when teaching the class again realize that I’d lost the notes and have to redo them. I will be doing all my writing on the Scribe and storing them for latter use. Having read some reviews, it sounded like the current software on the Scribe was not up to the competition. I have to say, however, I am very pleased with the existing software. You don’t get twenty different widths for the pen but rather five. I really don’t want to have to choose from a great many, and what they have now is just fine for my needs. It is true that you don’t have subfolders to create and a large notebook would be difficult to find things in. I get all of those issues. However, instead of writing a 100 page notebook I plan to write lecture notes in 10 notebooks of 10 pages in length saved under one folder. By using appropriate titles for each notebook I think it will actually be better than having one rather lengthy notebook. There’s not a great many templates to choose from, but I have found the ones currently available work just fine for my needs. Again, though, the Kindle Scribe exceeded my expectation for writing notes. Overall, I am thrilled with the Kindle Scribe. I really enjoy the reading and writing experience. Given the price, did I absolutely need the Scribe? Not really. I could read the physical textbooks/technical books. I could read the pdfs on my laptop. I could write notes on paper then scan them into my computer. Or, of course, I could do these things on a good tablet. However, I have always enjoyed the reading experience on a kindle and the Scribe might be the best yet. The writing experience on the Scribe is the closest digital device to paper that I have used. I am glad to have these things on one device which does not have all the distractions that come with laptops and tablets. I hope this review helps others in making their decisions. Oh, and as others have said, the battery is amazing compared to tablets and phones.
E**5
A great device - for specific users...
This is probably the most in-depth review I've made for an Amazon order. First, I absolutely love my Scribe. I was torn between this and the Remarkable 2 but decided to go with this because I'm also an avid reader with lots of Kindle books already...so that only made sense. So, as i mentioned in the title, this is a great little device for specific users. If you do a lot of drawing/sketching or graphic arts stuff, the Scribe (with the latest update) may disappoint. For heavy artistic stuff, I'd look more towards an iPad, MS Surface, etc. However, if you read a lot and need something that provides a medium to take plenty of notes, the Scribe is excellent. I take TONS of notes for work. To the point that I keep my old spiral-bound notebooks in a drawer in my office with dates of when I started and finished them. This method became unsustainable with lost notebooks during moves, pages torn out by kids cause they needed some "scratch paper", etc. I've only had this thing for about 2 weeks but I've already put it through the wringer for note taking. Books are excellent as you would expect from a Kindle and I've found the battery life is pretty decent, although not quite as good as, say, my Paperwhite. However, if there are any people @Amazon reading this, there are some improvements I really wish it had; and hope/think they could be added with future updates: - Bluetooth keyboard support - Landscape mode in notebooks - Lasso copy and paste - Ability to change the template for individual pages within a notebook - Shapes (like squares, circles, etc.) - Select and copy images/text from PDFs or books into notebooks - Make highlights and written notes in books - I bought the book...I should be able to write in it if I want. - OCR handwriting to text conversion - especially when sending notes via email - Save PDFs to folders instead of having to store them in your library - Ability to move the writing tool other than the default left and right side. I'd rather it be in a far upper right or lower left corner. As it is, I have to alternate the tool position from left to right once I'm about 1/3 down the page. - Save individual pages of notebooks as a new notebook (for example, I start taking notes in a notebook and on the 5th page, I start taking notes from a phone conference that turns into something completely unrelated to the rest of the notebook. It would be great if I could start a new notebook and choose existing pages of other notebooks to include in it.) A couple of bugs/weird things that I've noticed: - Sometimes, while writing a sentence, the last couple of letters will "erase" or just disappear. I've figured out that tapping the eraser once on the screen makes it reappear again. Not a huge deal, but is annoying cause it forces you to break concentration to correct it and restart. - Depending on where you place your hand when writing, you'll accidentally skip to a new page while writing. As above, not a big deal, but annoying. Maybe some setting to double-tap to start a new page or something would help. Anyway, overall, I think the Scribe is great for my needs and really look forward to what they can do with future software updates.
B**C
Very pleasantly surprised!
I've been searching for an e-ink tablet for a while. I tried the Remarkable, Boox, and now Scribe. After reading comparisons of the Scribe and Remarkable, I thought I would be disappointed in the Scribe since many reviewers preferred the Remarkable. I wasn't! I sent the Remarkable back for reasons I'll detail below. I never really got to try the Boox; it didn't come with the app, and I always got an error message when I tried to download it, so that went back as well. Also, the meager instructions for it are truly awful. The Scribe has been a pleasant surprise -- I've found it to be much more responsive and user-friendly than the Remarkable. Please note: I'm only using the Scribe for the notebook function; I haven't used it yet as a Kindle. My needs are pretty simple. I wanted an e-ink tablet to deal with all the clutter on my desk. I have to take a lot of notes, especially from phone conversations and Zoom meetings, and I end up with lots of notes scattered around. Yellow pads didn't work, and putting them in file folders to be stored in a file cabinet ensured they would be lost! An e-notebook was my solution, and it's worked really well. One of my issues from the start with the Remarkable was a problem with battery charging. I reported it to customer service and they wrote back with a list of things to do. None of them fixed the problem, so they sent me a link to sent it back for repair. I filled out the required information, and a few days later, got a message from their tech. dept. saying that "my request" had been denied! They sent me a list of more things to try, including one that involved buying a new cable. I wasn't about to pay more for this already expensive device. I clicked on the link they sent to respond, and it turned out to be a page for starting the process with customer service all over again! At that point, I threw up my hands and decided to return it. Some differences I've noted: On my Remarkable, swiping often didn't work the first time, even though I swiped exactly where customer service told me to. Moving from page to page could be laborious. The Scribe is lightning fast. In general, the Remarkable functions seemed clunkier and slower. I find the writing "feel" to be the same, though again, the Scribe seems more responsive in general. Maybe my Remarkable was a lemon, but dealing with customer service was so frustrating that I didn't want to pursue it. I liked the screen size on the Remarkable better. It's a little bigger, and I wish the Scribe were the same. The Scribe doesn't charge for a subscription. It bothered me that after a year with Remarkable, I'd have to start paying a monthly fee. The on/off button on the Scribe seems to be in a weird place, but I can live with that. By the way, Remarkable is located in Norway, so it takes a couple of days to get a response from customer service. Also, when you buy it, they don't tell you they are in Norway -- if you pay with a bankcard, you can get charged for a foreign transaction fee (in my case $16.00 which my bank waived when I complained). As I said, my needs are pretty simple, and the Scribe has been perfect for giving me a clutter-free desk!
K**R
Early Adopter? Gen 1 not ready, cumbersome to use, unintuitive, and not worth it.
I love my other Kindles (Signature Paperwhite and Oasis). And I REALLY wanted and tried hard to love this one and find a way to incorporate it into my day to day because, like many, the idea to combine my books, my audible, and the myriad notebooks I carry around (and lose) in a single tablet is a trifecta experience. But Generation 1 is definitely not worth it. I was able to get it substantially cheaper thanks to a holiday sale and a trade in, and if it's not worth it at almost 50% off, it's definitely not worth it at full price. Here's why. Using it as a paper notebook replacement is cumbersome, unintuitive, and time consuming. If you imagine how many people work - a textbook, laptop, or other resource on one side and a notebook for taking notes on the other, that's a process familiar to most and flows well. My thinking was that "Finally, I can keep all my notes well organized, add more details to my highlights, etc." We'll, you can't. This Kindle works the same as every kindle or fire tablet when taking notes - you highlight, add the note, with the only difference here being that you can do so with a Stylus. The real problem is that this space is limited to what you see in the picture. Even on the other kindle platforms you can type forever, or use voice, to make long notes. Here, you can't - you're limited to that tiny tiny space and can't expand it. Basically, this equates to replacing your paper notebook with tiny post it notes. It's completely impractical to say the least. You also can't change the background of this area like you can in the "notebook" support, which means no dotted or lines, etc. You're literally cramming everything onto the digital version of a Post-it-Note. So then I thought, "Ok, I'll setup a notebook and just switch between the book and the notebook, and at least the notebook will let me write as much as I want / as many pages / page background theme, etc. But no, there is no way to seamlessly switch between the book you're referencing and this kindle's notebook feature. You have to close the book, start up a notebook, find the page where the note should go, close it, start the book back up again, and keep going. If you made a manual reference in your notebook as to where in the book this is relevant, this reference becomes completely useless the minute you change your font size or orientation. As a Japanese language student, I was particularly excited about being able to practice kanji as I can't imagine acres of trees that have died just so I can practice writing characters. And, I was particularly excited that I could do so on the page of the Japanese textbook I was referencing. But alas, no again. For some reason this kindle would not work well with my eTextbooks. Some would not open, some I characters wouldn't show up. Performance wise, this tablet is abysmal. When under small to moderate load, the time it takes for pen strokes to register can be counted in full seconds. Switching screens, opening books, etc, are noticeably slower compared to other kindle versions. For students especially who need to take more notes that will fill a sticky note, and for language students especially too, this tablet completely misses the mark. The software, in general, is lacking considerably with relatively few options compared to competing eInk tablets. Amazon says so itself in the project description with comments like "Regular software updates." I want this tablet to work so all my Amazon subscriptions, books, etc, and all my notes / notebooks can accompany me, so I'll Try Gen 2 when it comes out. Honestly, this version feels like a pre-release alpha version or prototype a small group would use to give feedback on. It was released way too early and in no way is it ready for the wild. To overcome the shortcomings, I sent it back, and I use my oasis with my Remarkable 2, which feels much more natural, with my Oasis. Well, at least I'm down to two high quality products in the meantime, but looking forward to seeing if Amazon can revamp this to make it an equally usable environment. Aside from the tablet itself, I must say, the "Premium Leather Cover" that comes with the bundle is just junk. I wouldn't pay 71 cents for it much less 71 dollars. Imagine the thickness of a normal piece of leather. Amazon shaved that into 100 layers and pasted it on cardboard, and the other side is felt (so not an all leather case). It really is disappointing what a low quality item they tried to throw into making their "bundle." I'll be buying a 3rd party cover for it if I checkout later generations.
K**.
Short on functionality this early but fantastic device
I ordered this one as soon as it was announced and hadn't really realized how short on functionality it was going to ship with, but I'm still extremely happy with it so far. First up, it's a very nice Kindle device and is amazing for reading my books on. I adore the screen on it, and it's very snappy and responsive to navigate and write on. The screen size is also wonderful for reading on for my nearly 50 year old eyes that have somehow slipped into reminding me of my age by needing multi-focal lenses. One thing on this front that I miss from my Oasis is the buttons on the margin for page flipping. Those are nice on that device, although I don't hate that they're missing from this one, I just kind of wish they were there. Another thing I'm a little annoyed with is no 4G or 5G built in. I'll live without it and tethering isn't hard these days, but it's an annoyance that didn't need to exist on at least the top end models. I love the writing experience on the device, too. It's not smooth as glass like my iPad Pro with an Apple Pencil, it's much more like writing on paper. But it has a similar quick response to writing input that makes it feel pretty natural and not artificial or annoying, so Amazon have worked that part out well. The functionality is very basic at this point, which is probably the most negative aspect of the device. But it's actually SO basic that I have few doubts that this isn't in the pipeline to be addressed in software updates over the next several months. I would suggest not gambling on that if the cost is prohibitive to you because you should always make your purchase decisions on what you actually get when you buy, and not based on future promises or a naive belief that what you want will be delivered at any point. I can afford to live with my device as is, and it'll still meet the needs of why I bought it, just not optimally, if they don't add what I consider the missing functionality to it. That's not going to be true for everyone. The hardware they've used does support everything needed for all the additional features that I suspect Amazon is planning to add, if they've fully implemented it in the hardware, and at this price point, I believe they have, but I don't know it for sure. Things I think it's missing are: Pressure sensitivity for the pen A wider array of writing tools (drawing tools primarily) Stroke based storage instead of converting strokes to pixels Ability to zoom in and out of notes and drawings Handwriting recognition Related to handwriting recognition, the ability to search note contents More organization options for notes Perhaps a second app to segment writing from drawing functions, but this isn't a want, just a speculation on how they may approach some of these features if they add them Better Kindle integration - like having notes automatically sync to other Kindle devices and apps on other devices, more robust sharing options and integrating with other products like Office apps or drawing exports, etc. Ways to mark up a book with the pen beyond just the current sticky notes. This is a complicated ask because of the way ebooks are formatted, but it isn't unsolvable. My hope is that they are responsive to customer feedback and this becomes the premier Kindle e-ink device, and that they add this functionality to the current devices rather than milking them by only adding them to newer models. It seems more likely that they'll add most or all of the functionality to these devices, because otherwise they'd create a massive amount of customer backlash that they'd have to needlessly overcome, and that just isn't logical or necessary, so I think we'll see at least some of these features added over the coming several months to a year or two.
M**F
5 star product with defective pen and defective service
The Scribe is very nice for reading Kindle books and with a working pen is a decent replacement for the now defunct Sony Digital Paper. The Scribe came with a pen (stylus) that made marks on the screen when it was about an inch away from it. This made it impossible to use it as digital paper. I contacted Amazon about the problem and I thought I was chatting with a human being about it. I was told to order a new pen and when the pen arrives, I should contact Amazon and I would get a refund. The pen (ordered on 12/27/2023 arrived yesterday (1/6/2024). This pen works fine. I attempted to contact Amazon to get my rebate. First I tried chatting but the chat was with a robot that understood nothing about the problem. I then tried the callback option and it was also with a robot that didn't understand anything. So in addition to the $400+ for the Scribe and defective pen, I had to pay out another $64 for the replacement. When I saw that the replacement pen would take over a week to arrive, I ordered a pen that is designed for the Remarkable 2 which arrived in two days. That stylus works perfectly. Also, I searched the web and found that my problem with the pen was not a rarity. All sorts of fixes were given on the internet and all but one failed. The one that worked involves attaching a piece of aluminum foil at exactly the right place on the pen (in my case about 1.5 cm from the tip). I cut a piece of aluminum foil about 1 cm wide and put it on the pen and slid it until the pen only wrote when touching the screen (actually the point may vary, to find it encircle the pen near the point with the foil if it is too close to the point the pen will not write at all, slide it back until the pen writes this was 1.5 cm for me). I then used Scotch tape to hold the band of aluminum foil in place. I Then had a working pen. I checked the internet to try to understand why this "hack" worked. The reason has to do with the way that the stylus works. The screen has a grid imbedded that puts out an electromagnetic wave the pen has strategically placed coil that changes the energy from the screen to energy for the pen. It seems that the aluminum foil interferes with the signal and weakens the overactive pen. The Remarkable 2 pen works and the now redundent replaced premium pen works so I have 3 working pens. My main use for the scribe is to edit pdf files of manuscripts (this was the reason for the Sony Digital Paper) since printing large manuscripts uses a lot of paper. Bu one of my hobbies is drawing and I am enjoying using the Scribe as a drawing pad. It is an amazing convenience to be able to erase ink. The line it makes in pencil mode seems to be made with a pencil. Bottom line is if it came with a pen that worked or there was a possibility to communicate with a human about a problem then this product would deserve 5 stars.
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4 days ago
3 weeks ago