Max Nikulin writes:
> P.S. Concerning free PDF annotation tool, I have not tested if it is
> convenient and available on Android, but Firefox-106 release notes
> have the following entry:
>
>> It is now possible to edit PDFs: including writing text, drawing,
> and adding signatures.
>
> Almost c
On 28/10/2022 00:53, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
Everything said in this threed is very interesting, but now I am
hesitating between buying one of these devices or simply a 10-inch
tablet with a good screen, and then applying all possible blue light
filters to it.
Another option is a hardware filt
Juan Manuel Macías writes:
> [...] Anyway, I think it would be possible to write some python
> script[1] to extract the annotations and then parse the resulting xml
> from there to get a nice and beautiful Org document. Which also leads
> me to wonder if anyone has tried that.
I've found that or
Juan Manuel Macías writes:
> Actually, the idea of a device running Android is interesting because it
> allows you to install termux and thus Emacs. You could even use Emacs
> GUI by installing a GNU/Linux distro in termux and loading it as proot
> (+ vnc), or just activating the X11 repo in term
Max Nikulin writes:
> I see that definitely it is possible, but I am unsure it is more
> convenient than OLED or LCD tablet. 4 regimes for screen is an
> indicator of some complications. Choice of Android may be a way to
> avoid development of custom UI. I have not checked if it is possible
> to b
I am impressed, but I still believe that UI optimized for e-ink may be
more convenient for specific tasks involving org files than generic
Emacs build for Android. Perhaps conversion of handwritten notes to text
should be delegated to a laptop or a PC.
On 25/10/2022 23:59, Ken Mankoff wrote:
S
On Wednesday, 26 Oct 2022 at 16:31, L.C. Karssen wrote:
> Another happy reMarkable user here. It looks like the upcoming v3.0 of
> the software will allow entering text via the on-screen keyboard.
Interesting. Thanks for the heads up on this. Some interesting
updates.
--
: Eric S Fraga, with o
El 2022-10-26 08:31, L.C. Karssen escribió:
> https://support.remarkable.com/s/article/Software-release-3-0-beta
No remarkable.com or support.remarkable.com web page is viewable without
activating Javascript.
On 25-10-2022 15:55, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
Fraga, Eric writes:
I wonder if these devices are capable of exporting normal annotations in
plain text or xml?
The annotations are not text: they are vector data corresponding to the
movement of the stylus. You can extract that information (I h
See also Dasung NotEReader. Full Android tablet, no lockdown like the
ReMarkable. Looks fast - can watch YouTube videos for example. If it's
really full Android, then it should be able to install and run emacs
natively. 10.3 or 7.8 inch versions.
-k.
Please excuse brevity. Sent from tiny pocket
On Tuesday, 25 Oct 2022 at 21:37, Max Nikulin wrote:
> E-ink displays are slow (my device was manufactured 15 years ago but I
We are venturing well into OT for this list... ;-)
E-ink displays are getting significantly faster, with some claiming 60
Hz refresh rates (cf. the PineNote). Often, howe
Max Nikulin writes:
> E-ink displays are slow (my device was manufactured 15 years ago but I do not
> expect dramatic improvement), so applications should be heavily optimized to
> provide acceptable experience. I do not think that Emacs is suitable.
There are people already using Emacs on e-ink
On 23/10/2022 22:16, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
As I am beginning to have serious eye fatigue problems, I am thinking of
buying an e-ink device, not to read books but to read documents. My idea
is that it be an Android device and that it supports the installation of
apk, to be able to install Ter
On Tuesday, 25 Oct 2022 at 12:06, Eduardo Suarez-Santana wrote:
> I considered remarkable, but I read somewhere (can't find it) that
> handwritten PDF annotations were not coded as vector graphics, so I
> went for Onyx.
Conversion scripts (including my own adapted ones) take the rM notation
and cr
On Tuesday, 25 Oct 2022 at 12:55, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
> I see... I was referring to annotations entered as text. Can't you do
> annotations on those devices like you do in a typical PDF reader,
Not as far as I know (for the reMarkable; I have no experience with the
Elipsa). The virtual keyb
Fraga, Eric writes:
>> I wonder if these devices are capable of exporting normal annotations in
>> plain text or xml?
>
> The annotations are not text: they are vector data corresponding to the
> movement of the stylus. You can extract that information (I have
> software for the reMarkable that d
FTR, I'm a happy Onyx Boox user.
I considered remarkable, but I read somewhere (can't find it) that handwritten
PDF annotations were not coded as vector graphics, so I went for Onyx.
On Monday, 24 Oct 2022 at 18:34, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
> The main problem I find is that they both also run
> closed and, presumably, proprietary software.
They both run Linux but with proprietary user interfaces.
> I wonder if these devices are capable of exporting normal annotations in
> p
Fraga, Eric writes:
> On Monday, 24 Oct 2022 at 17:42, Jeffrey DeLeo wrote:
>> I am very happy with my Kobo Elipsa
>
> Your workflow is very similar to that of mine on the reMarkable and the
> two units are similar in size etc. It's a workflow that is fine for
> annotating documents (which is what
On Monday, 24 Oct 2022 at 17:42, Jeffrey DeLeo wrote:
> I am very happy with my Kobo Elipsa
Your workflow is very similar to that of mine on the reMarkable and the
two units are similar in size etc. It's a workflow that is fine for
annotating documents (which is what I want) but definitely no lin
I am very happy with my Kobo Elipsa
(https://us.kobobooks.com/products/kobo-elipsa).
I use the following flow very often:
+ Place a PDF in dropbox folder, sync to Elipsa
+ Read on Elipsa, annotate in various ways
+ Sync back to dropbox.
+ Look at PDF on my desktop computer (linux), ann
On Monday, 24 Oct 2022 at 11:50, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
> The Parabola hack looks pretty cool (that's supposed to be equivalent
> to being able to use Emacs with pdf-tools package).
Be aware (as I wasn't when I answered your previous post) that Parabola
is not free in the $ sense although the
Pedro Andres Aranda Gutierrez writes:
> My workflow is to create an HTML from the org file(s) and then
> generate an EPUB2 file forthe reader (in my case Kobo or Cervantes
> Light) I have always felt the rendition is much more confortable than
> PDF. Other readers may be better suited for PDF.
Th
Hi, Eric,
Fraga, Eric writes:
> Putting aside the org mode aspect for the moment, I highly recommend the
> reMarkable [1] tablet for reading PDF documents. I have owned one for
> several years now and use it all the time (in particular for reading 300
> pages theses on the train...). I do not u
Dear Juan Manuel,
On Sunday, 23 Oct 2022 at 15:16, Juan Manuel Macías wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> As I am beginning to have serious eye fatigue problems, I am thinking of
> buying an e-ink device, not to read books but to read documents.
> My idea is that it be an Android device and that it supports the
Hi Juan Manuel
My workflow is to create an HTML from the org file(s) and then generate an
EPUB2 file forthe reader (in my case Kobo or Cervantes Light) I have always
felt the rendition is much more confortable than PDF. Other readers may be
better suited for PDF.
Just my experience,
/Pedro A. Ara
Hi all,
As I am beginning to have serious eye fatigue problems, I am thinking of
buying an e-ink device, not to read books but to read documents. My idea
is that it be an Android device and that it supports the installation of
apk, to be able to install Termux/Emacs/Org-Mode and Nextcloud to sync
Probably an offtopic for your offtopic, but:
I use my phone to read e-books:
- AMOLED screen (black color doesn't emit light).
- low level of brightness (so I can read in the night without "losing"
melatonin). Usually e-book reading app gives you this option.
- the PDF reading app must have
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