惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Security Latest
Security Latest
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Jina AI
Jina AI
罗磊的独立博客
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
D
Docker
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
L
LangChain Blog
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
I
Intezer
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
H
Help Net Security
C
Check Point Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
P
Proofpoint News Feed
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
U
Unit 42
P
Privacy International News Feed
S
Schneier on Security
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
T
Tor Project blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
A
About on SuperTechFans
The Cloudflare Blog
A
Arctic Wolf
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
Project Zero
Project Zero
T
Threatpost

Android Authority

I know YouTube Music is flawed, yet I prefer it over Spotify Survey reveals 50% of users don’t like the new Google Health app It’s time for Samsung’s S Pen to evolve or die The Motorola Moto G Stylus (2026) is a sequel we didn’t need NotebookLM is quickly becoming the podcast app I didn’t know I needed Samsung’s next Galaxy Watch update could finally make your health data useful Google’s Gemini Spark is ready to run your digital errands while your phone is off Telegram’s finally getting an official Wear OS app again Nintendo is back on mobile, and it wants to turn your selfies into minigames Google Drive’s big document scanner overhaul is finally here — don’t overlook its power Spotify will finally give you real profile tools to make music listening more social Acer’s new gaming handheld might dodge the worst of tech inflation Meta is cooking up a new line of smart glasses, and they may not be Ray-Bans ChatGPT is retiring this beloved legacy model in June Is Microsoft Copilot not working? Here’s what’s going on (Update: Back up) Samsung Gallery starts quietly ending OneDrive support ahead of schedule Here’s a first look at custom wallpapers in Google Messages Rivian is pretty sure customers want AI, not Android Auto Leaked iPhone 18 Pro dummy units may have just shown the next Android phone color trend A company spent $500 million in one month after forgetting to set AI usage limits Now even MediaTek’s cheap chips are embarrassing the Tensor G5 in one major area Pixel 10 Pro XL user says Google returned their phone worse than dead The best robot pool cleaners of 2026: Top picks for all budgets and pool sizes Claude Opus 4.8 is more honest, less deceptive, and considerably cheaper Roborock’s Qrevo Curv 2 Flow is ready to mop up the competition — and your filthy floors Google is making it easier to share Gemini chats, media, and more with your team One UI 9 borrows one of the iPhone’s most useful call features This is the biggest mistake Oura is making with the Oura Ring 5 This Verizon user owed $400, but the carrier made an unexpected move Google’s Fitbit Air makes a strong case for minimalism and ditching your smartwatch Survey says a Windows-powered streaming device could be a surprise hit with many How I created personalized Spotify playlist covers to spruce up my library I’m a long-time iPhone user, but these Android 17 features are tempting me to switch This company wants to clean your house for free, to train AI and robots As an Oura Ring 4 user, here are 3 reasons why I can’t wait to buy the Oura Ring 5 Google Photos could soon give you more tools to make your Memories shine Google may have fixed the issue that was exhausting your Gemini usage limits This cheap, swiveling Android handheld is a blast, but it literally hurts my hands ChatGPT is working on a slew of new features for Android users The Galaxy Z Fold 8 could be creaseless after all From Siri revamp to new tools: Here’s how Apple could rival Gemini (with Gemini) in iOS 27 Google Photos could finally be giving its automated edits a proper home Google Contacts on Wear OS is trying out a smart photos-first redesign A bizarre Chrome bug is locking some Android tablet users out of their browser The Chrome browser is getting a big safety upgrade — if you use Windows This new projector lineup is all about summer sports and outdoor viewing Samsung Galaxy Watch 9 codenames suggest there will be a new Classic this year This open source app lets you free your Oura Ring from its subscription Save $300 on the Samsung Freestyle 2nd Gen portable projector Proton Mail is making it easier to say goodbye to Gmail Spotify’s new features make it easier to manage and listen to your music The Pixel Buds app is getting a new look — in more ways than one AYN Thor goes full Nintendo DS with an official stylus add-on Survey shows you’re not buying the Googlebooks hype just yet YouTube Premium gets three new features for an even better podcast experience Google Messages mostly walks back SIM switcher change everyone hated Google Meet’s latest update puts Gemini right where you need it Having issues with T-Mobile’s fiber internet? Here’s what’s going on Save 20% on Govee Mini Panel Lights right now in Amazon Choice deal Fire TVs get new startup ad that takes over the entire screen Oura Ring 4 price slashed to $399 on Amazon Gemini, Claude, and ChatGPT were asked to run a radio station, and they slowly lost the plot Save $200 as Samsung ViewFinity S8 Monitor deal drops price by 33% The best deal of the year on this LG QNED soundbar just landed, saving you 29%! Intel’s Arc G3 chips are here to pick a fight with AMD’s Ryzen Z2 Highly rated UGREEN Uno 30W USB-C Charger price drops to $21.99 (27% off) This new gaming handheld wants to take on the Steam Deck with Intel Arc inside Snapdragon C is here to power $300 Windows laptops, undercutting the Macbook Neo Just as fitness trackers get interesting again, the Xiaomi Smart Band 10 Pro goes global These new Android phones go all in on zoom photography and battery life Galaxy S25 could soon get the S26’s smartest Galaxy AI features Oura’s newest smart ring is tiny on the finger but big on impact CapCut is here for Android tablets, and it’s completely free for now LG says reports of a TV business exit are completely ‘baseless’ (Updated) The Motorola Razr Fold proves skipping Elite silicon was a smart move Spotify now lets you share your favorite part of a podcast Did ANBERNIC quietly downgrade its GBA SP-like handheld again? Not so fast. Samsung is using Galaxy Watch 8 to study what Ozempic, other GLP-1 drugs might secretly do to you The Motorola Razr Fold shouldn’t matter, but I can’t put it down Your phone number for 15GB storage? New survey shows deep divide over Gmail’s latest experiment A Google employee allegedly used insider info to manipulate Polymarket bets These are the 5 popular apps I switched to this year Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide dummy reveals an incredibly thin yet compact device I found a hidden way to use the Fitbit Air that Google didn’t tell you about The Google Fitbit Air’s ‘one size fit’ does not fit all One UI 9 could give users a killswitch for Android 17’s restrictive background playback controls Anthropic is preparing a major multilingual upgrade for Claude Voice Mode OnePlus 16 main camera leaks, and we’re not sure if it’s an upgrade or downgrade This luxury phone brand’s new foldable makes the Galaxy Z TriFold look cheap Roku’s biggest home screen refresh yet is rolling out now User claims Google locked down a 17-year-old account after a bizarre account change Walmart’s Onn just launched a $35 Google Home camera, and it looks like a steal! Android Auto just made switching media apps way less annoying Meta now lets you pay for the pleasure of using Facebook Google is making it easier to find the sites you actually care about in AI Search YouTube now lets you create a ‘custom feed’ about anything you want Upgrade to a 15.6-inch 4K portable monitor at a 20% discount Hot deal: PlayStation Pulse Explore buds drop to their all-time low price! This unusual ‘everything e-reader’ runs Android and lets you navigate with a knob Valve wants you to pay up to $300 more for the nearly three-year-old Steam Deck OLED
The reMarkable Paper Pure made me want to start writing things down again
Kaitlyn Cimino · 2026-06-14 · via Android Authority
reMarkable Paper Pure

reMarkable Paper Pure

The reMarkable Paper Pure strips away distractions in favor of a focused writing experience. With lightweight hardware, a 10.3-inch display, excellent stylus input, and streamlined software, it lands as a fantastic digital notebook.

As a kid, my favorite part of back-to-school shopping was picking out notebooks for the new year. Back then, they were color-coded by subject (according to the system in my head), and equipped with obnoxious spirals that would almost certainly get tangled in my backpack. It’s been a long time since I’ve shopped a school supply list, but my love of notebooks hasn’t gone anywhere.

That’s probably why the reMarkable Paper Pure ($399 at reMarkable) won me over so quickly. While many E-Ink tablets try to pack in productivity features, and Amazon’s Kindles keep adding limitations and AI tools, the Paper Pure is refreshingly committed to being exactly one thing: a really good digital notebook. After more than a week with the device, I’m in no rush to take it back out of my tech rotation.

More notebook than tablet

remarkable paper pure thin

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

The Paper Pure doesn’t look like most modern tablets. At 360g and just 6mm thick, the device is exceptionally light. Its asymmetrical bezel gives me somewhere to hold the tablet without constantly covering the screen in fingerprints.

The Paper Pure is exceptionally light and really feels like carrying around a notebook.

The 10.3-inch monochrome Canvas display reinforces the feeling that I’m carrying around a notebook, not a tablet. There’s also no front light, which is one of the bolder choices reMarkable made with the device. Without another lighting layer sitting above the display, the screen is cleaner, and the writing experience is more responsive. On the other hand, I need a lamp (or in my case, a head lamp) to use this comfortably at night, just like a pen and paper journal session.

reMarkable Paper Pure product notes

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

The device is also strictly grayscale, which stands out in contrast to the increasingly colorful e-ink market. Text looks crisp, and the screen retains the bright, paper-like look that monochrome e-ink still does best. I didn’t miss color nearly as much as I thought I would, which is shocking considering everything from my brain to my wardrobe is organized by ROYGBIV.

Internally, the Paper Pure runs on a 1.7GHz dual-core Cortex-A55 processor with 2GB of RAM and 32GB of storage. None of that is especially impressive by tablet standards, but it doesn’t need to be. The interface is fast, and the whole device feels focused in a way a lot of modern tablets don’t anymore. It also packs a 3,820 mAh battery that lasts up to three weeks on a charge, and I’ve yet to have to think about it.

Writing is still the whole point

ReMarkable Paper Pure Notebooks

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

Most importantly, writing on the Paper Pure is good enough that I started looking for excuses to use it. The textured display gives the stylus enough resistance without overdoing the paper gimmick, and the low-latency input keeps handwriting natural. I did miss compatibility with the brand’s Type Folio, but once I mentally committed to my untidy penmanship, the simpler notebook-forward setup felt nostalgic.

The writing experience itself is responsive and smooth with a comfortable stylus.

That feeling is also grounded in the simplicity of the reMarkable’s base software. I never got caught up digging through settings or tweaking the interface. It’s a low bar, but streamlining is surprisingly uncommon once you start using more feature-heavy e-ink tablets.

ReMarkable Paper Pure drawing

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

Since the Paper Pure is less intimidating than a lot of its competitors, I found myself using it more casually. Over the course of this review, the Pure took residence on my counter just like my nutcracker notepad that comes out at Christmas time. I used the device for everything from jotting down quick grocery lists to recording details while on the phone with a frustrating customer service rep. And to write notes to my partner while he was on the phone, reminding him to ask for the gossip I wanted. I scribbled random, profound thoughts throughout the day that turned out to be not very profound, and kept notes during Zoom briefings. I also used it to sketch nonsense during repetitive parts of said meetings.

In other words, the Pure dropped into my routine as seamlessly as a notebook because it behaves more like an old-fashioned writing pad than a productivity powerhouse. It’s not loaded with apps or a bookstore, so I’m not tempted to deep dive into distractions. Compared to the brand’s smaller Move, the larger display gives me enough room to comfortably write notes and review documents, and the Marker Plus feels even better than writing with a real pen. The stylus itself feels great in hand (probably my favorite of any I’ve tested), and I love a built-in eraser. I was moderately disappointed by the convert to text feature, which gets wonky when it comes to formatting. When I wrote a to-do list, for example, the template disappeared during conversion, and my tasks ended up mixed together.

ReMarkable Paper Pure Connect

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

It’s also worth noting that the Paper Pure isn’t completely stripped bare. ReMarkable still includes useful organizational tools like folders, tags, templates, document markup, and cloud syncing. An optional $3.99/month Connect subscription adds features like handwriting search, Google Calendar, Microsoft Outlook meeting integrations, AI-generated summaries, and deeper workflow tools. For work that’s more demanding than doodling dinosaur breeds, I appreciate the ability to annotate PDFs and brainstorm directly onto documents. All of these tools are there when I need them, but they rarely compete for my attention.

A focused device

ReMarkable Paper Pure Files

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

The biggest caveat for this device is that it is absolutely not for everyone. If your goal is to replace your traditional tablet or read a bunch of e-books, there are objectively better alternatives. Options from BOOX are dramatically more flexible thanks to Android apps and broader file support. The Kindle lineup offers much better pure reading devices, with the Kindle Scribe adding in stylus support for note-taking.

The biggest caveat of an otherwise great review is that this is not the device for everyone.

You can read books on the Paper Pure, but the device is much more document-focused than reader-focused. Annotating article drafts and reviewing media kit documents all work great. But, as mentioned, there’s no built-in bookstore or developed ecosystem for reading. The lack of a front light is also a real compromise, even if I ended up appreciating the cleaner display because of it. I loved the paper-like look during the day, but there were also a few times I swapped to a different device at night rather than parking under a lamp.

ReMarkable Paper Pure Sleeve

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

Then there’s the pricing. The tablet itself starts at $399, but the accessories push things upward quickly. The Marker Plus stylus feels almost essential, folio cases aren’t cheap, and the optional $3.99/month Connect subscription adds another ongoing cost if you want features like handwriting search, AI summaries, and calendar integrations. I’m always going to hesitate to add another subscription to my embarrassingly long list of monthly charges.

I will say, though, I love the Pure’s folio case. The padded wraparound design makes the Paper Pure feel genuinely protected, like the egg I wrapped in 2 feet of bubble wrap for a science fair in elementary school. The deep ocean blue color is especially classy. It’s also not cheap at $69. It’s definitely best to save money with the $449 bundle, which includes the Sleeve Folio and a Marker Plus (normally $129).

ReMarkable Paper Pure review verdict: Should you buy it?

remarkable paper pure alternatives

Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority

I have no business pushing my cart down the school supply aisle anymore, but the Paper Pure scratched a similar itch. There’s something satisfying about a tool that exists for one specific purpose and does it well. For more than a week, I’d pick the tablet up, write something down, and toss it back on my counter, desk, bedside table, or right into my bag, no paper cuts involved. Instead of grabbing my phone to type things into the notes app and inevitably getting distracted, I started writing things down more often, and that’s a luxury I’d forgotten about.

If what you're after is a streamlined, distraction-free digital notebook, the Paper Pure is a great find.

There are more capable options available, but while many brands keep trying to push more complicated devices, the reMarkable Paper Pure stands out by being refreshingly simple. If you want a dedicated e-reader with Amazon’s built-in bookstore and reading ecosystem, you’ll be better off with the Kindle Scribe ($629.99 at Amazon). If you want maximum flexibility, apps, and customization, a tablet from BOOX makes more sense. The Go 10.3 Gen II ($419.99 at Amazon) has a similarly sized monochrome display and Play Store access, and the Lumi model ($449.99 at Amazon) even adds a front light.

Compared to the rest of reMarkable’s lineup, the Pure feels like the cleanest expression of reMarkable’s philosophy. The Move ($499 at Amazon) still makes more sense if portability is your top priority, while the Paper Pro ($629 at Amazon) is the most ambitious device from the company.

reMarkable Paper Pure

Excellent writing experience • Focused and distraction-free • Thin, lightweight hardware

MSRP: $399.00

The reMarkable Paper Pure strips away distractions in favor of a focused writing experience. With lightweight hardware, a 10.3-inch display, excellent stylus input, and streamlined software, it lands as a fantastic digital notebook.

Positives

  • Excellent writing experience
  • Focused and distraction-free
  • Thin, lightweight hardware
  • Strong battery life
  • Useful productivity tools when needed
  • Great folio case

Cons

  • Expensive with expensive accessories
  • No front light
  • Limited reading ecosystem
  • No Type Folio support
  • Subscription-gated features

Thank you for being part of our community. Read our Comment Policy before posting.