![]() ![]() From using Kindles with Amazon & Calibre the Kindles are inferior for ebooks to Kobo, but better than other ereaders. I'd only consider the Scribe for proofing PDFs the 300 dpi vs 227 dpi is an advantage. Kobo integration to Calibre is best of all ereaders and I read all my ebooks bought from Amazon on the Kobo Sage. No idea how you extract them as I'm only interest in real text annotation of ebooks, or the Stylus "on the page" digital inking sketch/handwriting on the PDFs. The Elipsa and Sage has the Kobo text annotation, like any Kindle, but also handwritten sketches and handwriting can be attached as notes to eBooks instead. No true Text Annotation, no handwriting conversion/recognition and only 6 G byte storage. The reMarkable is rubbish compared to the Elipsa: no USB Mass Storage, only one-at-a-time USB network. The reMarkable is multilayer mono-paint package. The Sage/Elipsa Basic Notebooks are like the reMarkable Notebook, just a sketchpad, though there is PDF or PNG export. The handwriting/sketches appear to be added as an extra image in the PDF file. It's like writing with a ballpoint pen on paper copy. I proof PDFs on Elipsa and use it for PDF datasheets and manuals. I use 8″ Kobo Sage to read for pleasure, write with conversion to text to export and read for work (proof & annotate PDFs). I've not yet had to replace Sage or Elipsa battery and still "good". I've had magazine subs on Amazon and read them on a Kobo H2O. I still have a KK3 and PW3, so totally familiar with Amazon ecosystem and Calibre. I also have a working Kindle DXG (I replaced cell) and did recently have an Oasis. I have a reMarkable with Wacom EMR as used on Scribe as well as an Elipsa. The AAAA cell maybe lasts for 6 months and is 20c*. ![]()
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