For me the biggest upgrade is having the light. That's major. Writing in the dark is great. But I'm having a hard time acclimating to this screen. It's textured, far more than the rM2, but I don't know if I can get used to this. I'd be settling because of how great it is to have the light. If the rM2 had a front light, I'd be fine. That screen/marker combo is great. All that to say, I'm looking for one of those screen covers that add some drag to the writing experience. I miss being able to write lightly without slipping. Any suggestions?
They fixed/improved the biggest design flaw in the paper pro which was magnets messing up the precision. For example, when you place the remarkable2 near an iPad for some time, the pen no longer draws a straight line with a ruler. A watch demagnetizer is needed to fix temporarily until it happens again.
I've got an experiment for you, if you're up for it: People have been talking about how the amount of "give" when writing affects their sense of writing quality. The most common comparisons I've heard mentioned are writing on a single sheet of paper on a hard table vs. a stack of paper. What isn't usually mentioned in these conversations is whether that person is using a folio or has the tablet placed directly on another hard surface. Could you do a series of subjective tests where you write on the RM2 and RMP Pro on top of various surfaces? Directly on a hard surface, on top of the Remarkable folio, a stack of paper, and then whatever other surfaces you can come up with. I'm curious what kind of qualitative effect that has on the writing experience, and whether that might help explain why folks have such varied impressions of the new hardware (since I'd imagine folks with long-term existing devices already have cases, whereas someone just testing out the latest model may not invest in that right away). Might even be interesting to throw in an iPad and Pencil (or any other writing tablet) if you have one. Thanks for the video and keep up the quality work!
sound is not the difference maker, for me. the larger size of the pro is a game changer in taking notes plus, remakerable has continuous scrolling the others do not, i prefer the new pen of the pro, do to the heavier feel and the much longer lasting nib, the RM2 nibs would be flat in about a week, i am sure these pro nibs will wear down also but nothing so far, nothing beats the supernote with HOM pens but you have to use there Eink device to take advantage of this.
@roxas6094 Definitely worth it. And if you don't care about color the smaller one would be better for taking around all the time. I have both and I take my smaller 1 around when I go out to restaurants and so forth for sketching. but I love my remarkable paper pro for color. Definitely definitely worth it. I don't know anywhere without it, I use it for work, sketching, planning and personal.
For me the biggest upgrade is having the light. That's major. Writing in the dark is great.
But I'm having a hard time acclimating to this screen. It's textured, far more than the rM2, but I don't know if I can get used to this. I'd be settling because of how great it is to have the light. If the rM2 had a front light, I'd be fine. That screen/marker combo is great.
All that to say, I'm looking for one of those screen covers that add some drag to the writing experience. I miss being able to write lightly without slipping.
Any suggestions?
They fixed/improved the biggest design flaw in the paper pro which was magnets messing up the precision. For example, when you place the remarkable2 near an iPad for some time, the pen no longer draws a straight line with a ruler. A watch demagnetizer is needed to fix temporarily until it happens again.
@@xuepingsong5329 Yes I had this issue with the rM2
I've got an experiment for you, if you're up for it:
People have been talking about how the amount of "give" when writing affects their sense of writing quality. The most common comparisons I've heard mentioned are writing on a single sheet of paper on a hard table vs. a stack of paper. What isn't usually mentioned in these conversations is whether that person is using a folio or has the tablet placed directly on another hard surface. Could you do a series of subjective tests where you write on the RM2 and RMP Pro on top of various surfaces? Directly on a hard surface, on top of the Remarkable folio, a stack of paper, and then whatever other surfaces you can come up with. I'm curious what kind of qualitative effect that has on the writing experience, and whether that might help explain why folks have such varied impressions of the new hardware (since I'd imagine folks with long-term existing devices already have cases, whereas someone just testing out the latest model may not invest in that right away). Might even be interesting to throw in an iPad and Pencil (or any other writing tablet) if you have one.
Thanks for the video and keep up the quality work!
sound is not the difference maker, for me. the larger size of the pro is a game changer in taking notes plus, remakerable has continuous scrolling the others do not, i prefer the new pen of the pro, do to the heavier feel and the much longer lasting nib, the RM2 nibs would be flat in about a week, i am sure these pro nibs will wear down also but nothing so far, nothing beats the supernote with HOM pens but you have to use there Eink device to take advantage of this.
I have both and I love the paper pro best!
I want for studying is it worth it ? and is the pro too big to move around ?
@roxas6094 Definitely worth it. And if you don't care about color the smaller one would be better for taking around all the time. I have both and I take my smaller 1 around when I go out to restaurants and so forth for sketching. but I love my remarkable paper pro for color. Definitely definitely worth it. I don't know anywhere without it, I use it for work, sketching, planning and personal.
The pen with yellow color on the bottom is remarkable pen?
@@ypvinayreddy Yes that is for the rM2. The yellow piece is a repair as I broke the nib collar.
Thank you
Both sound unbearable with volume up 😂 love my rm2, looking forward to the rMpp
@@ML-iu9hb haha, yes there is a little too much screeching going on
So the pens are not compatible between devices, dang it
@@ValLawGal they are not!
Different technology used on the device to achieve the color which is the reasoning for this.
you lost me at the notion that sound offers insight into feel.
@@larrymarso4492 Pen on screen produces friction which produces the vibrations and sound which make up most of the feel of the writing experience.
Lol you're clearly not a hardcore stationary and writing tool enthusiast, we can absolutely tell what the feel is going to be by sound. 😂
@@ayannadivineempath 🤪