![]() The 2021 Paperwhites include a Kids Edition, which brings a bigger and sleeker screen, more lighting options, and IPX8 water resistance for the first time over the original Kindle Kids Edition. The 2021 Paperwhites all have USB-C charging, but the Signature supports wireless charging. Still, if you want to save some cash, just clean out your backlog you can remove a book from your device without deleting it entirely from your Amazon account. If you mostly listen to audiobooks, you may want to go for the Signature, since those tend to take up more room. That's a big difference, but you can still read and store a lot of books with 8 gigabytes (around 5,000). The Signature has 32 gigabytes of storage and the Standard has 8 gigs. Its faster page-turn rate means there's no delay while you read. The screens are brighter overall at their max and have adjustable warm lighting, but only the Signature can auto-adjust that brightness to your surroundings-we think that should be standard across all models. We tried the Signature Edition ( 8/10, WIRED Recommends), but all three have bigger, 6.8-inch screens with smaller bezels. ![]() The step-up, waterproof e-reader went from one to three models, and they rival the more expensive Oasis. You can use the Kindle phone app or the 'Send to Kindle' web browser tool to send any documents to your library and read them or annotate them on the Kindle Scribe.We think most people will like the Paperwhites the best. Like the ReMarkable, it also offers support for reading PDFs, Word files and other documents. ![]() It'll need a lot more additions in software updates to approach ReMarkable's offering here. It offers a handful of different ruled paper and lines paper templates, plus to-do lists, daily planner formats as well as blank, dotted and grid paper. The Kindle Scribe also offers templates for checklists, lined paper, grid paper and others. That ease of access is a key part of the reading experience and much simpler than Remarkable for reading. It works just like any other Kindle, with access to millions of titles through Amazon's own store. ![]() In contrast, Amazon's device is built on the Kindle platform, and so is already primed and ready for easy access to lots of books. You can read e-books on it, but it means dragging and dropping EPUB files manually. You can pay extra if you want more storage or the Premium Pen which - like ReMarkable's Marker Plus - has a built-in eraser on the back. On the surface, it may seem the ReMarkable 2 is more affordable, but when you factor in that you will need to buy either the standard Marker ($79/£59) or Marker Plus with built-in eraser ($99/£109), you're realistically going to be spending a minimum of $378/£358 on the ReMarkable tablet.Īmazon's entry-level option includes the Basic Pen for the $339/£329 starting price point. So how does Amazon's compare? Specs, price and availability ReMarkable has made a bit of a name for itself in this space, offering its own digital notebook. It's the first E Ink tablet, or paper tablet, from the company but it's certainly not the first to market. It's called the Kindle Scribe and - as the name suggests - you can write on it as well as read all of the company's e-books. At its product launch event in Autumn 2022, Amazon unveiled a new kind of Kindle.
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