The Lenovo Smart Paper does the one thing I wish my Kindle Scribe could do

Books and writing, put it together

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

I was pleasantly surprised by theLenovoSmart Paper atCES 2023in Las Vegas. Writing tablets with E Ink screens, like our favoriteOnyx Boox Note Air 2, are hot right now and I’ve been waiting for the oneE Ink tabletthat hits all my bases before I call the category a home run. The Lenovo comes close to a win, but it still proves that no writing tablet gets everything right.

I got to check out the Lenovo Smart Paper in person, and it makes quite the competitor to less expensive options like thereMarkable 2writing tablet and theAmazon Kindle Scribe. All of these devices are in the same price range, just under $400 in the US with a pen and hopefully a book cover, though accessories can get pricey.

Like theKindleScribe, the Lenovo Smart Paper has its own light and can give you warm and cool lighting depending on your time of day preferences. It has a huge bezel, and beyond the border there is a small tray where the magnetic stylus sits.

Is this better than hanging the pen off the edge of the tablet, as with most other E Ink writables? It’s a clunky-looking design choice, but the Lenovo will come with its own cover, and together this should keep the pen more secure.

There are three things I want an E Ink tablet to do

There are three things I want an E Ink tablet to do

Because the Lenovo Smart Paper is Android at heart, it can run apps and perform some tasks that its competitors can’t handle. It can convert handwriting to text on the fly, and it can even record audio and attempt transcription. The competition in this price range can’t do those things.

There are three bases I need a writing tablet to tag. First, I need a place to find books, preferably one of the sources I’m already using, like my public library apps or theAmazonKindle market. Second, I need good writing options – for note-taking, journaling, planning, and even just doodling.

The last is more difficult. What I want foremost in a writable E Ink tablet is the ability to write on my books. I want to write notes in the margins and circle text on the page. I’ve been a longtime student and then spent six years as a high school English teacher, and this is why I still rely on paper books. I need to annotate a personal copy of my titles.

Unfortunately, licensing issues make this difficult. It is unclear where the prohibition lies, but manufacturers that give you a bookstore won’t let you write on books from that store.

If you buy an Amazon Kindle Scribe, you cannot write in any of your books. You can make sticky notes that are tied to that book, but notes in the margins are verboten. Same for the Kobo book store. TheKobo Elipsawill let you write in other books, including ePub and PDF files, but not the books that you buy or borrow from the Kobo store.

Every writing tablet is missing something crucial

Every writing tablet is missing something crucial

I may never get the writing tablet I want, even though my needs seem so simple. I need a place for books. I need a place for writing. I need to write on books.

Every major tablet is missing something. The reMarkable 2 tablet has no good place for books. The Scribe has no good place for writing. Here comes the Lenovo Smart Paper, and finally I can write in my books! I can make notes and add comments. Home run! Unfortunately, the Lenovo tablet tries to steal home without tagging all of the bases.

The Lenovo Smart Paper has great options for drawing and writing. There are plenty of background templates and nine different pen styles. The stylus is pressure-sensitive and tilt-sensitive, so even calligraphers and serious doodlers will enjoy it.

It also runs Android 11, though you’d hardly know it, and that is by design. Lenovo is not includingGoogleMobile Services. This means you won’t have theGoogle Play Storeon the tablet. You can add apps, but you need to know how to do this on your own, Lenovo won’t officially support sideloading.

When I asked Lenovo about this, the response can be puzzlingly summarized as “people will figure it out.” You can Google instructions for sideloading .APK files, but that’s an inelegant solution. I’m sure that Lenovo is saving money on licensing GMS from Google, but this also means you won’t have a Chrome Web browser, Gmail, or even Google Calendar apps preloaded on this Android tablet.

Fix the app problem and it’s all good, Lenovo

This is too bad because, unlike the Kindle Scribe, the Lenovo Smart Paper actually lets me write on my books. I can load an ePub file, which the Scribe cannot manage, and write directly on the page.

So, where do I find books? Lenovo will preload an eBooks.com storefront. That’s a good solution, and eBooks.com offers a good selection of books that makes it a fine independent competitor to the Amazon Kindle market or the Kobo Store. Of course, eBooks has its own DRM, so I’ll have to see if books I buy can be annotated, or just books I load myself.

There is still plenty of time for Lenovo to make some software corrections, including hopefully better support for loading apps. The Lenovo Smart Paper is scheduled to launch late in 2023. It has the right features at the right price, so hopefully, Lenovo can smooth over the experience and give me the writable E Ink tablet that finally does everything I need.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.

Phil Berne is a preeminent voice in consumer electronics reviews, starting more than 20 years ago at eTown.com. Phil has written for Engadget, The Verge, PC Mag, Digital Trends, Slashgear, TechRadar, AndroidCentral, and was Editor-in-Chief of the sadly-defunct infoSync. Phil holds an entirely useful M.A. in Cultural Theory from Carnegie Mellon University. He sang in numerous college a cappella groups.

Phil did a stint at Samsung Mobile, leading reviews for the PR team and writing crisis communications until he left in 2017. He worked at an Apple Store near Boston, MA, at the height of iPod popularity. Phil is certified in Google AI Essentials. He has a High School English teaching license (and years of teaching experience) and is a Red Cross certified Lifeguard. His passion is the democratizing power of mobile technology. Before AI came along he was totally sure the next big thing would be something we wear on our faces.

The Kindle Colorsoft faces shipping delays, but don’t be put off by its yellow screen issue

UPDATE: Amazon has paused Kindle Colorsoft shipping following screen issues

Belkin SoundForm Wired Earbuds with USB-C Connector review: sadly, these live up to their nominal price tag