Thank you - zooming into those charts highlighted the problems with the SuperNote, for me - 1) No colour meant that the charts didn’t make sense. 2) The zoom pinch doesn’t give you immediate feedback of exactly where you’re zooming and how much. I think that’s confirmed to me that I should stick with my iPad for reading and annotating academic papers and standards, for now.
It would be great if you could address how annotated PDFs sync with the cloud and computers, whether annotations from the SN are editable on those devices or flattened, etc. basically review how the SN devices operate within a larger ecosystem. Most of us read on tablets but process and write on our Macs/PCs.
04:14 -> That's not a bug! You have to tap the digested part of the source document, then the digest page opens up with two windows: the upper one showing the digested part of the PDF, the lower one gives you the opportunity to enter handwritten annotations. There's also a trash bin you can click on to delete this specific digest.
Exactly what I was looking for! Can it handle pdf ebooks of lets say 500 pages ? Will it show the table of contents and can you switch easily between chapters?
i think it ultimately depends on the file size? if a regular book with mostly text, 500 pages should be a breeze. if table of content is built-in with the pdf, then you can switch between the chapters
@@EReaderChannel Sorry, yes you are right of course. My computer science ebooks often have 30 to 50 MB because of images and illustrations. At the moment I read them on my regular tablet with the Xodo app.
This is very useful, thank you! Some more questions: How difficult is it to import PDFs into the tablet? And how difficult is it to export your annotated versions back to your computer? How do the notes/highlights look if so? And lastly, would you personally recommend the Supernote still, given the lagginess we see in this video? Thanks!
It's easy to import pdfs and export annotated versions back to computers. Maybe a video will tell better how the notes/highlights look. I would 100% recommend supernote as a digital notepad for writing, such as taking lecture notes, organizing ideas, prototyping, drawing digrams. Supernote is OK but not the best for reading and annotating pdfs. Boox devices are much more capable in handling pdfs.
Thats how reviews should be! People talk and talk abou their subjective experience but this is how you really know how the device works!
Thank you so much!
Thank you - zooming into those charts highlighted the problems with the SuperNote, for me -
1) No colour meant that the charts didn’t make sense.
2) The zoom pinch doesn’t give you immediate feedback of exactly where you’re zooming and how much.
I think that’s confirmed to me that I should stick with my iPad for reading and annotating academic papers and standards, for now.
Onyx Boox has some eink tablets that offer both color and much faster refresh speed. Check out models like note air3c or tab ultra c
It would be very nice a video using all the features of the kindle app. Can you copy and paste text from a pdf?
Thank you so much! This is very useful.
Thank you, this was very helpful.
It would be great if you could address how annotated PDFs sync with the cloud and computers, whether annotations from the SN are editable on those devices or flattened, etc. basically review how the SN devices operate within a larger ecosystem. Most of us read on tablets but process and write on our Macs/PCs.
Interesting. Cancelling an action should be very straightforward and intuitive though.
04:14 -> That's not a bug! You have to tap the digested part of the source document, then the digest page opens up with two windows: the upper one showing the digested part of the PDF, the lower one gives you the opportunity to enter handwritten annotations. There's also a trash bin you can click on to delete this specific digest.
Thanks for this explanation!
Thanks !
Exactly what I was looking for! Can it handle pdf ebooks of lets say 500 pages ? Will it show the table of contents and can you switch easily between chapters?
i think it ultimately depends on the file size? if a regular book with mostly text, 500 pages should be a breeze. if table of content is built-in with the pdf, then you can switch between the chapters
@@EReaderChannel Sorry, yes you are right of course. My computer science ebooks often have 30 to 50 MB because of images and illustrations. At the moment I read them on my regular tablet with the Xodo app.
@@AmeeliaK onyx Boox devices are excellent at handling large file size pdfs. I think most tablets will be capable of handling 30-50mb files.
Hi there! MAy i ask what's in your opinion the best PDF functionality e-writer?
Boox note or max series for sure, by a large margin.
@@EReaderChannel thanks!
This is very useful, thank you! Some more questions: How difficult is it to import PDFs into the tablet? And how difficult is it to export your annotated versions back to your computer? How do the notes/highlights look if so? And lastly, would you personally recommend the Supernote still, given the lagginess we see in this video?
Thanks!
It's easy to import pdfs and export annotated versions back to computers. Maybe a video will tell better how the notes/highlights look. I would 100% recommend supernote as a digital notepad for writing, such as taking lecture notes, organizing ideas, prototyping, drawing digrams. Supernote is OK but not the best for reading and annotating pdfs. Boox devices are much more capable in handling pdfs.
Can you read Epub on it?
yes you can
@@EReaderChannel those which we transfer from phone?
it doesn’t matter where the epub file is from
@@EReaderChannel okay thank you so much