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A plug for the Daylight computer

You may have noticed more linked lists on this blog, starting this summer and ever-increasing. This is the direct result of moving my RSS reading from (mostly) NetNewsWire on the phone to (mostly) Feedly on the Daylight tablet. Whatever the cons I thought it had in the beginning, they melted away as the proof is in the output. Interestingly, I hardly ever use the pen, but did pair it with an old (pre-Touch ID) Magic keyboard encased in this handy case/tablet stand and this light-weight pair of devices is all I need on most short trips.

Now, it is not a cheap device! There is currently a 48 hour pre-Black Friday flash sale, and it is still $649 pre-tax. It is also much less versatile than an iPad (no camera and therefore no video calls, and certainly not a good media player although being an Android tablet it does have an official YouTube app, unlike some other better-screened devices. But if you already have a large phone and a laptop, does that middle screen truly need to be a full laptop replacement?

I was also pleasantly surprised by the (heavily customized) Android tablet interface. Things have evolved quite a bit since I briefly owned a Fire tablet, which appropriate to the name I wanted to burn in an effigy. I haven’t owned a Remarkable or a similar e-ink device, but from the refresh rate alone I would guess my reaction would be the same. The plain old LCD technology that Daylight uses Even though, yes, they’ve rebranded it to “e-paper” and say it’s their invention. I don’t know enough about screen technology to comment on whether this is valid, but to me it smells like mostly marketing. was the perfect compromise for my uses, and one I hope more companies would emulate.

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