The Kindle Scribe vs the ReMarkable 2 Tablet

Person writing on Kindle Scribe

Image: Amazon

After what seemed like eons, Amazon finally announced its first e-ink tablet that doubles as an e-reader and a tablet that you can write on, called the Kindle Scribe. While this is the first e-reader from one of the first major retailers to double as a writing tablet, it’s not the first e-ink writing tablet on the market — and another model, the ReMarkable 2 Tablet, may be the writing tablet for you instead. If you’re split on which model to opt for, I’ve listed the key reasons to buy one over the other below.

More: Everything Amazon just announced and how to buy it

Specifications

Kindle Scribe

ReMarkable 2

Display size

10.2-inch

10.3-inch 

Display

300-ppi Paperwhite display

Monochrome digital paper display

Weight

433 g

403.5 g

Processor

Not yet available

1.2 GHz dual-core ARM

Connectivity

Wi-Fi 2.4GHz, 5.0GHz, USB-C

Wi-Fi 2.4GHz, 5GHz

USB-C

Waterproof

No

No

Storage

16GB, 32GB, 64GB

8GB

Backlight

Yes

No

Battery

Weeks

Weeks

Marker

Basic — included or Premium Pen — sold separately

No charging, 4,096 pressure sensitivity pen with tilt detection — sold separately

Pen nibs

Replaceable – $15

Replaceable – $14

Color

Tungsten

Silver

Ebooks supported

Yes — Kindle OS

Yes — ePUB, not Kindle-compatible

Files Supported

PDF, TXT, PNG, GIF, JPG, TXT, RTF, HTM, HTML, PNG, GIF, JPG, JPEG, BMP and ePUB.

PDF and ePUB

Cloud storage

Microsoft OneDrive coming early 2023

Google Drive, DropBox, and Microsoft OneDrive, My ReMarkable

Subscription

No

Connect $8 per month

Price

$339

$299

Pen price

$59 for Premium Pen

$129 for Marker Plus


You should buy the Kindle Scribe if…

1. You want an all-in-one e-reader and writing tablet

Many people, myself included, love to both read and write and would prefer to carry around one tablet instead of two separate devices. The Kindle Scribe promises the integration of a Kindle e-reader and a writing tablet with note-taking capabilities. The note-taking tablet will offer organizational tools that allow you to take notes inside the ebooks and organize them.

While the ReMarkable 2 tablet supports digital files in PDF and ePUB formats, the Kindle Scribe supports those formats as well as GIF, PNG, JPG, JPEG, BMP, TXT, RTF, HTM, and HTML.

2. You’re integrated into the Microsoft ecosystem

The Kindle Scribe has preset templates to help you create notebooks, journals, and lists, but it also can create sticky notes in Microsoft Word and other compatible Word documents — something that the ReMarkable 2 cannot do at this time. While you can upload on the ReMarkable 2 and jot notes, it can only send out documents in PDF, PNG, and SVG format — not DOC or DOCX formats. The ReMarkable does offer Microsoft OneDrive cloud storage.

Starting early next year, the Kindle Scribe will also get OneDrive capability in addition to the DOC formatting, meaning that it will be fully integrated with the Microsoft system.

You should buy the ReMarkable 2 Tablet if…

1. You want a distraction-free digital notebook

While the Kindle Scribe is a note-taking device, the ability to read a Kindle ebook and surf the internet browser still poses a distraction. The ReMarkable 2 tablet doesn’t support Kindle ebooks — only PDF and ePUB files. The only ways you access the internet on a ReMarkable 2 are sending documents and accessing your Google Drive, OneDrive, or DropBox. It’s a more distraction-free device for taking notes and organizing thoughts on digital paper.

Person writing notes on a smart notebook

Image: Remarkable

2. You want multiple brush features for note-taking

The ReMarkable offers eight different pen brush options when writing: ballpoint pen, fineliner, marker, penci, mechanical pencil, paintbrush, highlighter, and calligraphy pen. These pen features coupled with the 4,096-level pressure sensitivity make it very easy to organize your thoughts on the digital display — it truly feels like writing on paper, and the pen strokes don’t pixelate as I write. It also offers tilt detection and the tablet can be set to either left- or right-hand writing in the settings.

Alternatives to consider:

Open to other digital note-taking options? Check out these ZDNET-recommended options.

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