Those are pretty good. I really miss that feature on the Sony PRS-350.
Once you do a drawing on the Kobo, it's pretty much handled like a book, even listed within Books and you can assign it to a shelf. And as you said, there is no option to erase or correct mistakes; and while you can load the picture to view it, you can't edit it again. Once it's saved it's done forever.
The 350 treats sketches as an image in its own category. You had full erase ability and could reload any image and edit it as many times as you wanted. And with the included stylus, you had better control over drawing. I used to draw on mine quite often, even used it to quickly jot down notes while I was out, it was a great feature.
In comparison, the Kobo is so limited that I never use it anymore at all.
|