I often find it very hard to write on my computer. As soon as I settle in and let those creative juices flow … ding! In comes a Slack notification. OK, it’ll take two seconds to address this first. Minutes later, I’ll feel the urge to check my inbox. Oh wow, six urgent emails. Two hours later, I might have typed a single word on my page. That usually leads to a late night of writing. Rinse and repeat.

The ReMarkable 2 has been a salve in this process. This e-paper tablet with a comfy stylus is an excellent digital notepad—it mimics paper and pen far better than many other devices—and the keyboard attachment has become a great way for me to type up stories distraction-free. You can write notes, draw sketches, mark up PDFs, and organize all of these documents into folders. Five years after the release of that tablet, the company is unveiling a new product called the ReMarkable Paper Pro. It elevates the notepad experience while still prioritizing that distraction-free ethos.

“We invented the category,” says Mats Herding Solberg, the head of product management at the Norwegian company. “We are focused literally on focus and making a single product that’s really good on the verticals that we believe are important. We don’t want to be the company that goes super broad and tries to add too many bells and whistles.”

Paper Trail

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

ReMarkable’s Paper Pro isn’t strictly a successor to the ReMarkable 2. Think of it like how the “Pro” version of the iPhone aligns to the standard model. It has some nice upgrades at a higher price starting at $579, but you can stick with the $399 older model if you don’t need the new features; it’s not going away anytime soon.

So what’s new? The highlight is color. At CES 2024, E Ink—the company that produces many of the electronic paper displays found in Kindles and the like—showed off more devices than ever using color E Ink technology. This list now includes the new ReMarkable Paper Pro, though Solberg says ReMarkable has done a lot of work on top of E Ink’s technology to perfect the color experience. The custom “Canvas Color” display stack is comprised of physical color particles that move around the screen to show specific colors, rather than a separate filter on top of the black and white display. Solberg says this should better replicate the actual feeling of “color on paper.”

Don’t expect vivid, bright colors like you see on your smartphone’s screen. These hues are still muted, and you can only choose from nine colors (from magenta to cyan), but you can blend and layer them together, which can then create even more color options.

Overhead view of a tablet with handdrawn 3D perspective floating blocks on the screen and a stylus resting beside the tablet

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Also new is a front light system. It’s different than the backlight typical of phone screens. Instead, a front light angles the light source down onto the tablet’s screen so it’s reflected up at your eyes. This is a design that’s become pretty standard over the years in the world of e-paper devices. The ReMarkable 2 only reflects ambient light, which makes it difficult to see the screen in a dark room. This isn’t a problem with the Paper Pro. You can adjust the brightness of the light, though it’s still not going to get eye-searingly bright. Just enough that you can use it in dim conditions.

The Paper Pro has a larger 11.8-inch display, which means none of the old accessories for the ReMarkable 2 will work on this unit. That’s why there are an array of folio covers ($89 and up) at launch to support the new device, along with a Type Folio cover ($229) that adds a keyboard. Even the stylus has been rebuilt. The Marker/Marker Plus are active styli, so they need to be charged—just pop ’em on the edge of the Paper Pro, where they will magnetically attach and start wirelessly charging.

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