It has the look and feel of a traditional notebook, with support for digital features that actually improve its usability. The Rocketbook Pro 2.0 is a great place to start if you’re curious about digital notebooks. Given the Rocketbook Pro 2.0’s performance, we’re pleased to see its expansion into sticky notes with the same properties. The quality of your digital copy will depend on your phone’s camera, but if you’ve upgraded any time in the past four or five years, this shouldn’t be an issue. Data from iCloud Drive is accessible through a web portal, so in theory, we could access our notes from anywhere in the world. Rocketbook automatically generated a folder on iCloud Drive, and we could retrieve any additional pages we scanned in one place on our phone, tablet, or computer. We snapped a picture of the page using Rocketbook’s app and chose the place we wanted it synced with. Getting digital copies of our pages onto our service of choice was equally simple. Once we got the hang of it, writing and erasing was a snap. The pen’s eraser worked well, too, though using it required a little more force than we expected. The pen’s tip was large enough that our writing and drawings-however small-were always legible. It was thick and weighty, yes, but those attributes made it easy to grip and hold. We were particularly impressed with the Rocketbook Pro 2.0’s pen, which felt incredibly good in the hand. This isn’t a big deal, but something to note if you plan on walking around with it. Its hard cover gave the notebook a premium feel, though it did add an appreciable amount of weight. The best thing we can say about our time with Rocketbook’s Pro 2.0 is that it felt just like using traditional paper and pen-albeit really nice ones.
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