Quote:
Originally Posted by Matej101
I don't think the pen I tried was capacitive, it was the kind that can tell the tablet where it is even before touching the display. My issue wasn't with resolution, but with my own precision - the (physical) pen tip was "gliding" around too easily on that glossy glass surface. Maybe it's different on e-ink or a matte display, I haven't tried any of those.
Here are my 10.3" options:
The InkPad X at 9490 crowns (389 euro)
The Onyx note air at 11490 (471 euro)
The Onyx note air 2 at 13490 (553 euro)
The Onyx note 3 at 14490 (594 euro)
I'm not including anything above that, I'd really like to fit under 400 euro, the lower the better obviously.
The Remarkable 2 is somewhere around that price range too but from what I read it's mostly for writing, and my main use case is reading, and not just pdfs.
There's only one vendor that carries the Kobo elipsa around here, it's horribly expensive and the site looks quite dodgy.
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The main thing that effects pen feel is the type of material on the screen and on the pen tip. An iPad is hard plastic on glass and so feels super slick. Others will use softer plastic or rubbery tips to get a better feel but the tips tend to wear out faster. There is also matte screen protectors that are sold to give a more paperlike writing feel. They aren't necessarily made for evey model but you could always buy bigger and cut down to fit. If you get a device that uses a Wacom pen like the Boox line you have a huge choice of pens and tips that work for it. MyDeepGuide on YouTube has a video where tries out a bunch on pens and tips.
The fastest devices are those made by Boox followed by Boyue. They have the most RAM by far (Note Air has 4GB for example vs. 1GB in the Kobo Elispa and InkPad X) and have decent modern midrange smartphone CPUs.