Amazon.ca:Customer reviews: Introducing Kindle Scribe (16 GB), the first Kindle for reading and writing, with a 10.2” 300 ppi Paperwhite display, includes Basic Pen
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  • Introducing Kindle Scribe (16 GB), the first Kindle for reading and...
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Introducing Kindle Scribe (16 GB), the first Kindle for reading and writing, with a 10.2” 300 ppi Paperwhite display, includes Basic Pen

Introducing Kindle Scribe (16 GB), the first Kindle for reading and writing, with a 10.2” 300 ppi Paperwhite display, includes Basic Pen

byAmazon
Style: Basic PenSize : 16 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedChange
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RCS
4.0 out of 5 starsGreat hardware and basic experience, software updates needed
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on March 6, 2023
I have never used a Kindle before and purchased the Scribe for it's notetaking abilities.

My goal was to be able to write and keep notes by date, correct as needed and transfer to other applications, but keep the original.

1) Cost effective device, with a long battery life. I charged the Scribe when I first purchased it and have been using it on and off for scribbling down notes from meetings since January 10th. I still have 21% battery life left (wifi on and off). This thing has amazing battery life - charging it for the first time today. A review mentioned the battery life and pen nibs are poor. This has not been my experience - still using the original pen nib and it does not look worn.

2) Basic features (writing / erasing). Haven't compared it to anything else, but it's pretty close to writing on paper. There is sometimes a lag on the erase feature, but it is not an issue. One thing that would be nice, is to have the pens programmable button (or the eraser on back) allow selectable erase (press, hold and draw a circle around the text you want to erase). I fine the eraser on the back of the pen not so useful. Writing is excellent (only issue is that it can sometimes be glitchy close to the right of the screen. Hopefully this is a software glitch that will be fixed and seems to happen on PDF's - not a huge problem. Navigation is a bit on the counter-intuitive side - will take getting used to.

3) Notebooks. Default notebook templates are limited and basic. Missing features that were added in Feb's update : Subfolders, Page Navigation and Pen styles For me this fixes 1.5 issues - subfolders and page navigation - page navigation would be better with search, so it's half the solution. There is no calendar template with default year, month day's. This would make it simple to track notes in one notebook. The only way to do this in notebooks is to write them down. No search feature, no OCR, no cut/copy/paste (please add this!) . These are very limiting on the notebooks side and important in taking notes. I understand this is coming and am looking forward to it and am willing to wait. Navigation to pages within the notebook is available with the fix. This is much better, but takes time - search would be much better or a calendar notebook to get to the date. I can't stress enough how important cut, copy and paste are.

4) Saving grace to 3). Found a site where someone create PDF files of calendars by year. They are hyperlinked, so you can click on year, month day and write as many notes as you want. Love it and it was free. Am using this exclusively while I wait for the Scribe versions of this in notebooks.

Overall, the hardware is excellent. Software is lacking, but that can and is being updated. Price is reasonable (I got it on sale). Did not pick up the Kindle branded case as I found an off brand for $24 and it's very good.
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yoni
3.0 out of 5 starsMay become good with software updates but not functional for work use case as is
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 9, 2022
I am returning after giving it a few days - I really wanted to love this. I suspect that they can make this a great device with better software but too big of a gamble to wait and see without any transparency on upcoming features they hope to add, if any.
The device itself feels very good, well made, nice size, the fabric case is excellent, lightweight, snappy, and allows for two ways of propping the device up. The pen feels good, and it seems to do what it's supposed to do for the most part. The warm lighting is also nice. Main beefs for trying to use this as a work tool:

1) The is no way to organize notes. Being able to do any of the following would have made it functional: reorganize pages, index or search, being able to add pages from different templates, being able to copy/paste/move sections or text, text conversion, being able to add titles or subsections, being able to jump between notebooks more easily or to pin, being able to create notebook templates from a PDF... as it is you can only create a notebook with a given page format throughout, delete it, or put it in a folder.

2) There is no calendar, task list, or any helpful organizing tool. Only notebooks with various calendar formats, from my perspective, if that's what I wanted I would buy a paper notebook. Being electronic, i'd think would have provided some more flexibility such as mix-match, sort, search, group, keyword, index, titles, email a page...

3) Transferring files for markup - if you put a PDF directly on the device for some reason I can't fathom it is not possible to mark it up. In order to mark up one must send it via "Send to Kindle" service. Perhaps there is some indication somewhere of what security is used there and/or what Amazon's data collection policy with respect to that service is but I could not find it, and so for instance would not be able to send confidential client files to the device in order to work on them. Ultimately this makes it a brick as far as my main use case is concerned, and seems strange given that the ability to mark up a PDF exists on the device.

4) To send files, again there is no obvious way to do this without again passing through Amazon's service, you can only email a download link from the Kindle email address. Not particularly professional, not particularly comforting from a data security perspective.

5) Speaking of data collection - I noticed that it is possible to opt out of allowing Amazon to use data collected for the purpose of sending targeted ads, however it is not possible to opt out of data collection generally (beyond whatever is ostensibly necessary for the functioning of the device such as remembering last page read etc.). I gather from this that they are free to use any data to sell to third parties or create dystopian tools to sell to governments à la [see Washington Post article 2018-05-22 "amazon-is-selling-facial-recognition-to-law-enforcement-for-a-fistful-of-dollars"] which I would have loved to opt out of.

6) Marking up Word files: (again only possible if send via "Send to Kindle?") does not allow any editing of the Word file itself, does not allow any mark up on the Word file, does not allow for "comments" in the native Word document. Again, only sticky notes are allowed. And the only way to view those sticky notes off the device is a summary page with all of the sticky notes, and no indication to where in the document they relate. Basically useless as far as I can tell. The workaround seems to be to send a Word document via the email with the subject "Convert" in which case it will appear on the device as a mark-up capable PDF. No ability to use or edit collaborative documents via Onedrive or other.

7) I have not tried other E-INK devices so I can't say if this is better or worse that others, but it definitely does not feel like paper. It is a slightly roughened screen, but not pen or pencil on paper. And I can't see any measurable pressure sensitivity. That said, it works well for what it does and is nicer than writing on an iPad or on a Samsung Note. It is not possible for anything to come out looking like what they show on the ads. I also can't say whether the 300 dpi vs 227 dpi makes a measurable difference, but I can't say that I was blown away with the crispness either.

8) As an e-reader, which was not my main drive to buy this, but seems to be the main purpose of the device: It is nice, easy to read, nicely backlit and adjustable, a good size, and feels lightweight at first. But holding it in one hand it will put a lot of strain on the hand after a while and gets tiresome, and since the only way to turn pages is by tapping or swiping on the side, I can't see any way out of one handed holding. And, as advertised, you can not really do much with the pen in the e-reader ("in order to keep it uncluttered") - only sticky notes, which are not organizable or searchable, seem unwieldy and useless to me. And you can highlight in the book, but not with the pen... only by long pressing with a finger. It seems strange to me to include pen functionality on an e-reader device but to refuse to allow that pen functionality within the e-reader itself?? And to allow highlighting by a klunky press and hold and resize with a finger, but not with the pen?? If I were to get an e-reader again, I would buy a smaller more lightweight one for less than half the price.

9) The web browser is completely not functional at all. Not that I can see any reason a web browser would be necessary. But there is also no ability to add any apps so whatever comes with the device seems to be all that can be done. So no Word, Excel, Onenote, Outlook, calendar, task list...

Just overall most of what I would expect to be basic on a device like this is not present. Maybe it will be in 6 months.. but not now. Note taking and organization are just way too limited and the inability to transfer documents in a normal secure way and do useful mark up are deal breakers. I might have kept it even just as a book reader but given the pen doesn't add anything to the reading, I would opt for a smaller, cheaper, lighter Kindle in that case.
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From Canada

RCS
4.0 out of 5 stars Great hardware and basic experience, software updates needed
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on March 6, 2023
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I have never used a Kindle before and purchased the Scribe for it's notetaking abilities.

My goal was to be able to write and keep notes by date, correct as needed and transfer to other applications, but keep the original.

1) Cost effective device, with a long battery life. I charged the Scribe when I first purchased it and have been using it on and off for scribbling down notes from meetings since January 10th. I still have 21% battery life left (wifi on and off). This thing has amazing battery life - charging it for the first time today. A review mentioned the battery life and pen nibs are poor. This has not been my experience - still using the original pen nib and it does not look worn.

2) Basic features (writing / erasing). Haven't compared it to anything else, but it's pretty close to writing on paper. There is sometimes a lag on the erase feature, but it is not an issue. One thing that would be nice, is to have the pens programmable button (or the eraser on back) allow selectable erase (press, hold and draw a circle around the text you want to erase). I fine the eraser on the back of the pen not so useful. Writing is excellent (only issue is that it can sometimes be glitchy close to the right of the screen. Hopefully this is a software glitch that will be fixed and seems to happen on PDF's - not a huge problem. Navigation is a bit on the counter-intuitive side - will take getting used to.

3) Notebooks. Default notebook templates are limited and basic. Missing features that were added in Feb's update : Subfolders, Page Navigation and Pen styles For me this fixes 1.5 issues - subfolders and page navigation - page navigation would be better with search, so it's half the solution. There is no calendar template with default year, month day's. This would make it simple to track notes in one notebook. The only way to do this in notebooks is to write them down. No search feature, no OCR, no cut/copy/paste (please add this!) . These are very limiting on the notebooks side and important in taking notes. I understand this is coming and am looking forward to it and am willing to wait. Navigation to pages within the notebook is available with the fix. This is much better, but takes time - search would be much better or a calendar notebook to get to the date. I can't stress enough how important cut, copy and paste are.

4) Saving grace to 3). Found a site where someone create PDF files of calendars by year. They are hyperlinked, so you can click on year, month day and write as many notes as you want. Love it and it was free. Am using this exclusively while I wait for the Scribe versions of this in notebooks.

Overall, the hardware is excellent. Software is lacking, but that can and is being updated. Price is reasonable (I got it on sale). Did not pick up the Kindle branded case as I found an off brand for $24 and it's very good.
Customer image
RCS
4.0 out of 5 stars Great hardware and basic experience, software updates needed
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on March 6, 2023
I have never used a Kindle before and purchased the Scribe for it's notetaking abilities.

My goal was to be able to write and keep notes by date, correct as needed and transfer to other applications, but keep the original.

1) Cost effective device, with a long battery life. I charged the Scribe when I first purchased it and have been using it on and off for scribbling down notes from meetings since January 10th. I still have 21% battery life left (wifi on and off). This thing has amazing battery life - charging it for the first time today. A review mentioned the battery life and pen nibs are poor. This has not been my experience - still using the original pen nib and it does not look worn.

2) Basic features (writing / erasing). Haven't compared it to anything else, but it's pretty close to writing on paper. There is sometimes a lag on the erase feature, but it is not an issue. One thing that would be nice, is to have the pens programmable button (or the eraser on back) allow selectable erase (press, hold and draw a circle around the text you want to erase). I fine the eraser on the back of the pen not so useful. Writing is excellent (only issue is that it can sometimes be glitchy close to the right of the screen. Hopefully this is a software glitch that will be fixed and seems to happen on PDF's - not a huge problem. Navigation is a bit on the counter-intuitive side - will take getting used to.

3) Notebooks. Default notebook templates are limited and basic. Missing features that were added in Feb's update : Subfolders, Page Navigation and Pen styles For me this fixes 1.5 issues - subfolders and page navigation - page navigation would be better with search, so it's half the solution. There is no calendar template with default year, month day's. This would make it simple to track notes in one notebook. The only way to do this in notebooks is to write them down. No search feature, no OCR, no cut/copy/paste (please add this!) . These are very limiting on the notebooks side and important in taking notes. I understand this is coming and am looking forward to it and am willing to wait. Navigation to pages within the notebook is available with the fix. This is much better, but takes time - search would be much better or a calendar notebook to get to the date. I can't stress enough how important cut, copy and paste are.

4) Saving grace to 3). Found a site where someone create PDF files of calendars by year. They are hyperlinked, so you can click on year, month day and write as many notes as you want. Love it and it was free. Am using this exclusively while I wait for the Scribe versions of this in notebooks.

Overall, the hardware is excellent. Software is lacking, but that can and is being updated. Price is reasonable (I got it on sale). Did not pick up the Kindle branded case as I found an off brand for $24 and it's very good.
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yoni
3.0 out of 5 stars May become good with software updates but not functional for work use case as is
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 9, 2022
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I am returning after giving it a few days - I really wanted to love this. I suspect that they can make this a great device with better software but too big of a gamble to wait and see without any transparency on upcoming features they hope to add, if any.
The device itself feels very good, well made, nice size, the fabric case is excellent, lightweight, snappy, and allows for two ways of propping the device up. The pen feels good, and it seems to do what it's supposed to do for the most part. The warm lighting is also nice. Main beefs for trying to use this as a work tool:

1) The is no way to organize notes. Being able to do any of the following would have made it functional: reorganize pages, index or search, being able to add pages from different templates, being able to copy/paste/move sections or text, text conversion, being able to add titles or subsections, being able to jump between notebooks more easily or to pin, being able to create notebook templates from a PDF... as it is you can only create a notebook with a given page format throughout, delete it, or put it in a folder.

2) There is no calendar, task list, or any helpful organizing tool. Only notebooks with various calendar formats, from my perspective, if that's what I wanted I would buy a paper notebook. Being electronic, i'd think would have provided some more flexibility such as mix-match, sort, search, group, keyword, index, titles, email a page...

3) Transferring files for markup - if you put a PDF directly on the device for some reason I can't fathom it is not possible to mark it up. In order to mark up one must send it via "Send to Kindle" service. Perhaps there is some indication somewhere of what security is used there and/or what Amazon's data collection policy with respect to that service is but I could not find it, and so for instance would not be able to send confidential client files to the device in order to work on them. Ultimately this makes it a brick as far as my main use case is concerned, and seems strange given that the ability to mark up a PDF exists on the device.

4) To send files, again there is no obvious way to do this without again passing through Amazon's service, you can only email a download link from the Kindle email address. Not particularly professional, not particularly comforting from a data security perspective.

5) Speaking of data collection - I noticed that it is possible to opt out of allowing Amazon to use data collected for the purpose of sending targeted ads, however it is not possible to opt out of data collection generally (beyond whatever is ostensibly necessary for the functioning of the device such as remembering last page read etc.). I gather from this that they are free to use any data to sell to third parties or create dystopian tools to sell to governments à la [see Washington Post article 2018-05-22 "amazon-is-selling-facial-recognition-to-law-enforcement-for-a-fistful-of-dollars"] which I would have loved to opt out of.

6) Marking up Word files: (again only possible if send via "Send to Kindle?") does not allow any editing of the Word file itself, does not allow any mark up on the Word file, does not allow for "comments" in the native Word document. Again, only sticky notes are allowed. And the only way to view those sticky notes off the device is a summary page with all of the sticky notes, and no indication to where in the document they relate. Basically useless as far as I can tell. The workaround seems to be to send a Word document via the email with the subject "Convert" in which case it will appear on the device as a mark-up capable PDF. No ability to use or edit collaborative documents via Onedrive or other.

7) I have not tried other E-INK devices so I can't say if this is better or worse that others, but it definitely does not feel like paper. It is a slightly roughened screen, but not pen or pencil on paper. And I can't see any measurable pressure sensitivity. That said, it works well for what it does and is nicer than writing on an iPad or on a Samsung Note. It is not possible for anything to come out looking like what they show on the ads. I also can't say whether the 300 dpi vs 227 dpi makes a measurable difference, but I can't say that I was blown away with the crispness either.

8) As an e-reader, which was not my main drive to buy this, but seems to be the main purpose of the device: It is nice, easy to read, nicely backlit and adjustable, a good size, and feels lightweight at first. But holding it in one hand it will put a lot of strain on the hand after a while and gets tiresome, and since the only way to turn pages is by tapping or swiping on the side, I can't see any way out of one handed holding. And, as advertised, you can not really do much with the pen in the e-reader ("in order to keep it uncluttered") - only sticky notes, which are not organizable or searchable, seem unwieldy and useless to me. And you can highlight in the book, but not with the pen... only by long pressing with a finger. It seems strange to me to include pen functionality on an e-reader device but to refuse to allow that pen functionality within the e-reader itself?? And to allow highlighting by a klunky press and hold and resize with a finger, but not with the pen?? If I were to get an e-reader again, I would buy a smaller more lightweight one for less than half the price.

9) The web browser is completely not functional at all. Not that I can see any reason a web browser would be necessary. But there is also no ability to add any apps so whatever comes with the device seems to be all that can be done. So no Word, Excel, Onenote, Outlook, calendar, task list...

Just overall most of what I would expect to be basic on a device like this is not present. Maybe it will be in 6 months.. but not now. Note taking and organization are just way too limited and the inability to transfer documents in a normal secure way and do useful mark up are deal breakers. I might have kept it even just as a book reader but given the pen doesn't add anything to the reading, I would opt for a smaller, cheaper, lighter Kindle in that case.
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David Rutledge
4.0 out of 5 stars A LOT TO LIKE ABOUT THE SCRIBE!
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on February 2, 2023
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
We have all read some of the criticisms of the Kindle Scribe, but I've actually found a lot to like. Here in a nutshell:

1) I' find writing on it better than satisfactory, and I'm not without previous experience writing on other tablets. The stylus that comes with the Kindle is good, but I slightly prefer the Staedtler EMR Jumbo, because the latter is easier (less tiring) to hold, being a little "fatter". Overall, for the first time ever, I can write very small and legibly and with enough forward momentum that my handwriting looks pretty darn good. Yes I've tried the Remarkable 1, the Boox Note Air, the Mobiscribe Origen and Wave (also great), and the Boox Nova Air 2. Not saying these tablets are "bad" -- but the Scribe allows me to write longer, with less stress. Any tablet will allow you to jot a ten word note down, but if you want to really write for a while the Scribe is my pick.

2) The Kindle experience is great, IMHO. The Kindle app on other e-ink tablets for the most part, doesn't quite cut it: I'm not a fan of looking at flashes every time I turn the page. I know, some tablets allow you to adjust the refresh rate and partially overcome this -- but so far, from my experience, they don't seem to do a great job at it. if most of your reading comes from reading your Kindle books, the Scribe is a pretty good fit, and many of the alternatives pretty bad. I don't think it would be possible to have a better screen image than the Kindle Scribe if one is talking purely about the resolution and brightness and blue shifting and sharpness -- which is pretty important if you value your eyes. Of course all the Kindles are really good from this perspective.

3) Some of the limitations of the Scribe are now being overcome by templates you can purchase online at very little cost: indexed notebooks, journals, Cornell pages -- and many others little apps (well, PDF's really). Now if you are a heavy note-taking user with zillions of notes and scheduling and probably primary use in a business setting, then the Scribe might not be your first choice. But for less demanding users, it is not bad -- certainly better than some of the criticism might indicate.

4) The Scribe appears to be solidly built, really solidly built, without any obnoxious plastic visible (other than the stylus). This does make it heavier, but still remarkably light. In my opinion it's better to use one of the new, clear, sort of rubbery plastic "cases" (well, they just cover the back of the Scribe, but can be reversed to cover the screen while travelling -- because they are lightweight. The trouble with most of the cases is that they weigh a ton and can suddenly holding your Scribe burdensome -- and defeat all that engineering designed to keep things lightweight.

5) The Scribe is priced more reasonably. It's not so bad if you invest in an expensive tablet that is ultimately your new "beloved object" -- but if you end up feeling disappointed and reeling from a lot of hype that evaporates once you have one in your hands and try it out, well heck, the Scribe won't make you feel burned (IMHO).
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D. Smith
3.0 out of 5 stars Well thought out but it needs to grow to be useful...
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 5, 2022
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I received the Scribe a few days ago. I was especially interested in the online reviews which I have found have some glaring omissions or maybe gloss-overs - one omission specifically concerning the notes function might mean I will be returning this unit.

Hardware: The hardware is excellent with the exception that there appears to be a slight uneven gap between the metal border and the screen. On my unit, it is wider on one side, and narrow and snug on the other. This may be just my unit and is not a show-stopper for me. Just an observation. The unit is easy to hold. It is lighter than I was expecting.

As an eReader: Amazon has this down pat. The larger screen, I have to say, makes reading much more enjoyable. I didn't think it would make a difference but it is huge. If it was a unit with just the larger screen at about 2/3 of the current price it would be a recommended purchase hands down.

As a notetaker: The Good - the pen is amazingly comfortable and the screen and pen are as good a simulation of paper and pen as I have ever experienced. It is simply a pleasure to write on the Scribe. No it is more than pleasurable; it is nothing short of perfection. The pen is the best pen I have ever used on a tablet. It has good weight and fits into the hand without error. And the palm rejection is perfect as far as I am concerned. No errant marks.

The Bad and needs to be improved: The note-taking is good. And I am not going to dock the lack of writing recognition, as many reviewers have focused on because my experience with it has been hit-and-miss anyway.

But once you get more than one page of notes there is no menu that creates thumbnails to enable you quickly to jump back and forth through your notes. You have to scroll through them full-page by full-page until you get to where you want to be. This is a horrendous mistake by Amazon and makes the Scribe, as a note-taker, next to useless. All my notes range from 10 to 40 pages and having no quick way to jump through the document is seriously short-sighted. I am sure Amazon will correct this with a software update but right now the lack of this feature severely hinders the Scribe. The faster Amazon corrects this glaring error the better.

As a Gen 1 product, the Scribe is excellent and it ticks almost all my boxes save one. However, the lack of that one feature severely reduces the utility of the Scribe for me and I assume for others who plan on using this as a replacement for pen and notepad.

(If this unit has this feature and I have somehow overlooked it, please direct me to it and I will amend my review.)

Update: The first major update has been released and my disappointment in the Scribe grew. The only additions to the notebook feature are a Go To page and nested folders. What I was really looking forward to was a thumbnail feature for my notes where I could navigate my notes by thumbnail. Giving me a Go To page feature is not useful at all. So my original review stands - as a larger e-reader it is very good. However, as a notetaking productivity device, the Scribe stills falls woefully short. If I could return it I would and I would encourage anyone thinking of buying it for notetaking to look elsewhere.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars I like it but….
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 3, 2022
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I purchased the Scribe for the note taking features and was hoping the Voiceview screen reader would be better in this model. I have tried the voice view on my other Kindle but its a pain in the butt to use and beyond frustrating. However, once you get it going and ‘don’t touch anything’ it works for the most part! The screen is large for reading, so much real estate. No issues there.

The note taking is okay. Super basic stuff. It reminds me of those Boogie boards but the scribe has erasing abilities plus you can change the pen sizes, has a highlighter, oh and a light! A big plus on the light. It does cost significantly more too. When you write on it, it feels pretty darn good. I like! Not slippery like the iPad and not overly scratchy. Like I said it has basic writing features and if you’ve used an iPad with all the fancy features, you will feel the limitations with the Scribe. (I still love my ipads)

I always liked the battery life on the kindles so I’m sure it will be a win there and the pen, no batteries to deal with = perfection! I got the premium pen.

The unit is slim, built nicely, feels solid but after awhile your hand/wrist will get tired if holding it up to read or write. It might have been great if it was maybe the size of the 8 inch Fire Tablet. If there were two sizes to chose from, I would have picked the smaller size.

The unit is expensive and only a $50 spread here in Canada between the 16gb to 64gb models. Is it worth keeping with its shortcomings or return and wait for the next gen or updates? I’m on the fence. I will use it and decide by the return date. All in all, I REALLY do like it and enjoying it, probably because its new so time will tell.
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RM
4.0 out of 5 stars A good start
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 8, 2022
Style: Premium PenSize : 32 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
This is based on my initial impressions and I will follow up with more detailed considerations over time. I use the Kindle for reading and marking up books and pdfs for the most part, even if it can do more. What I find so far is that you cannot send to kindle marked up PDFs and expect to see them on your kindle unscathed. For amazon seems to remove many the markings (especially highlights) which seems odd. I also find that the processing of pdfs is not perfect, with text at the bottom of the page sometimes getting cut off, and often the footnotes as well, which is not acceptable. Side-loading may prevent this but then you can't write on the pdfs, which if Amazon allows, might be the way forward.

The inability to write directly on Kindle books is absurd, and this absurdity applies to epubs that you send to kindle and even more so for MS Word docs. I suppose allowing that makes it difficult to collect notes in one place neatly, but they should let the user decide what is more important to them. The other problem is that pubs don't necessarily get transferred as is...especially if words have accents, etc. and often become unusable on the kindle as a result.

The reading experience so far has been very good, and the case is essential. The note-taking experience is also very good though folks say that the Remarkable is better because it has pressure sensitivity, etc.. But for those of us who just want a writing experience that feels real (unlike on the iPad) and are not artists, this is more than fine.

The kindle itself is beautiful and easier to read on even if it seems to approach the weight that may not make it ideal for long-term handheld reading...but time will tell.
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Daylen
4.0 out of 5 stars Great for reading if your textbooks support it
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on January 15, 2023
Style: Basic PenSize : 16 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
As a university student, the Scribe is a great device for reading the numerous assigned PDFs due to its distraction free operating system. My eyes appreciate that any PDF can be converted between light and dark mode, and the screen doesn't have any glare. The device's battery holds a charge for weeks, and the notebook feature allows me to use my laptop less often in classes, so I no longer need to bring my laptop charger, which weighs more than the Scribe. Using the pen feels natural and is much better than the Microsoft Surface and Lenovo styluses that I've used in the past.

For my use case, the Kindle Scribe made sense, but it isn't for every student. To start, textbooks that require proprietary apps like Vitalsource and O'Reily can't be used on the device, despite them supporting the Kindle Fire tablets. The web browser is outdated, so don't expect to be using any online services on it. In Canada, the software also doesn't support audio playback. Audible and Amazon Music are absent. Even if your books support the Scribe, keep in mind that writing on pages is only limited to small PDFs loaded through the Send to Kindle portal and that even handwritten sticky notes have limited support. I'm trusting that Amazon will fill in some of these gaps in the coming months.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Appreciate it for what it is, a device for reading and writing
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on December 30, 2022
Style: Basic PenSize : 16 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I received it as a gift but also knowing what it's purpose/limitations were. Since the software is being updated as time goes my review will only cover the highlights for me of the current features.
So far;

I'm able to choose from different notebook templates available which cover all the necessary types from daily planner style, dotted, calendar, and your classic variety of lined paper.

Create simple folders, no folders within folders yet but I personally don't mind this.

Highlight the Kindle e-books directly. Contrary to most reviews, I discovered that by pressing a bit longer on the screen with the pen you can highlight the words as you would with a mouse on a desktop. Although it's not that hand drawn feel it's a cleaner look in my opinion. You can also highlight on imported files more organically.

As a student I like that the Kindle scribe makes you focus at the task at hand~ reading and writing. A key improvement would be the file transfer system but I think that is expected. Overall I'm excited to use this as a part of my day to day. It definitely consolidates notes and books without overcomplicating it. If you're looking to do complex things or is very intricate in note taking this may not be the ideal device for you.
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Abbas B.
5.0 out of 5 stars Good First Attempt
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on February 17, 2023
Style: Premium PenSize : 32 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
Where to even start.

This is a good first attempt. I bought this as a replacement for pen and paper, and so far it is doing a good of it there. But a lot of shortcomings.

You go through nibs like crazy! I would go through one pen every month or two, and a paper notebook every 2 months or so. I'll be buying nibs for a while until someone comes along and creates a 3rd party pen that can effectively replace their pen. REALLY DISAPPOINTED with this, it will cost me more in the long run than pen and paper ever would.

I've had this only 30 days and have gone through the original nib and am now on my third - you get five free but I'll need to buy another pack pretty soon and at $2.00 each they are more expensive than buying a good old-fashioned pen.

Battery life absolutely sucks. If I don't close the cover, it's in standby mode. It's not convenient to close the cover every time I'd done with it. Because of that I'm recharging the device every 2-3 days (my son has an iPad that he uses extensively daily and can get 3-5 days before charging).

I can't add labels to the notebook, so like a paper notebook, I need to search through each notebook to find what I'm looking for.

I should be able to easily cut and paste content within the same notebook or other notebooks, but this doesn't exist at all.

I don't like reading on devices, so it will never get used for that.
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Arman
4.0 out of 5 stars Good but not amazing
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on February 28, 2023
Style: Premium PenSize : 64 GBLoad Configuration: Without Kindle UnlimitedVerified Purchase
I would love to see an improvement in pdf reading experience. If the font is small on the pdf I usually zoom in. But I can't go to the next page of the pdf without zooming out first. I would like a button or gesture which would allow me to go to the next page more easily when there is zoom in

Also I would like to see more writing space when I am annotating pdfs. When annotating pdfs. It would be great to have a button where you can switch to a blank page and start writing immediately.
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