Great review man, I agree while i wouldn't buy it solely for the drawing capability... it is a great drawing pad that's also a notebook! mich better than the Scribe or rM. 1:40 just fyi you can now sideload APKs, Brandon Boswell and Ed from organizing for change both made great videos on it
@BaileysDad thank you for your input, to my understanding you are right regarding exclusively the preview of the image at a 100%, but when you zoom in it seems they are showing the same rendered image just bigger, they are not rendering again at 200% or 300%, etc... technically the file could contain higher resolution, but I'm not sure how they are processing within Atelier, I've been researching about the different Eink options out there, but I'm still not sure about what route to take just because of this specific issue, I want to be able to draw and then reproduce this drawings in bigger format, has anyone had any experience with a similar situation?
You can from the regular notes app. Not sure what the brushes are like there, but those are pdf vectors or svg. I had the Fujitsu quadreno and that had a nice vector export, sadly no layers so it sucked for drawing. I now use a remarkable, and its vector process is awful. It just love traces to ver a low res raster file, so the exported images never look as nice as they do on the device. Would love more export tests with these. It seems every reviewer neglects these and the developers put little effort. No reason you shouldn’t be able to do finished linework on these things.
"no way around this" is not true. No reason the app cant keep track of more pixels than its display outside of processing power or ram.. By this logic no display could zoom in to a higher resolution image to reveal more pixels... you say "cause of the physics of e-ink displays" well... there are literall e-ink computer monitors and they can zoom in just fine using photoshop... not sure where you got this idea from.
First off, I'm definitely not a pro when it comes to E-ink displays (still learning! 😅) But the reason I claimed this was based on the following rationale: regardless of the resolution of the e-ink device, they all require charged pigment particles inside of liquid to be polarized within small capsules (similar to pixels)...if I understand correctly, it's the size of those capsules that defines the visual quality, I.E. the screens PPI. From the tech specs on their site the screen is a 7.8-inch Glass EPD with 300 PPI at 1404 × 1872 resolution. Even just visually inspecting the screen up close you can see the image quality doesn't look like it's delivering 300 PPI so I chalked it up to the nature of EPD's. I'm open to being wrong though (because I really want to export more cleanly from this device!) Thanks for sharing your feedback 👍!
@@BaileysDad Oh, if you mean physically zooming in like with your camera or bringing it closer to your face then you're totally right, is that what you meant? Otherwise if an image resolution is 2x that of the display, zooming the image 2x within the software should not appear any more pixelated than the zoomed out image, regardless of screen type. I apologize if i misunderstood.