After the release of its much-improved second generation “paper tablet,” reMarkable pushed into the high end with the color-capable Paper Pro and then downsized into a unique “reporter’s pad form factor with the Paper Pro Move. The reMarkable Paper Pure returns focus to some of the device’s core promises — freedom from distraction and a smooth, lag-free writing experience — at a lower price. reMarkable supports popular third-party cloud services for storage and offers a workable limited sync solution without a subscription to its Connect service. Handwriting conversion requires a subscription, but the company now supports up to five devices per subscription after previously raising the ceiling from one to three. The company’s accessories have always been top-notch. While it has rolled out sleeves in green, pink and a dark blue, there’s no mention of compatibility with the keyboard accessory that worked with the reMarkable 2.
Tablets
Hands-On: Atari Gamestation Go
Pros
✔️Large screen, HDMI out, and range of context-sensitive control.
✔️Can optimize games for 4:3 or 16:9 optimization.
✔️Can load ROMs for many classic systems via microSD card
Cons
✖️Small selection of Atari 5200 and 7800 games.
✖️No button-mapping for user-added ROMs
Score: 9️⃣ (out of 10)
Once, the Flashback consoles provided just about the only way to relive the early days of Atari videogaming. Lately, however, in addition to a range of mini remakes like the Atari 7800+ (now available in a Pac Man edition) the market has been saturated with a range of products that provide retro experiences on the go. Most of these, though, have had smaller displays and have been sold with unlicensed game files. Previous sanctioned Atari handhelds have included AtGames’ nearly decade-old Flashback Portable (with a 2.8″ display and bundled with up to 80 games) and My Arcade’s Pocket Player Pro (with a 2.75″ display and bundled with 100 games).