Jack Baty / Scribbles
April 2nd, 2024

Using the reMarkable 2 as Read-Later device

I know, I know, the reMarkable 2 tablet is designed as a digital replacement for writing on paper. It's not necessarily meant as a document reader. But that's what I've been using it for.

Reading PDF on reMarkable 2
Reading PDF on reMarkable 2

For years now I've saved web articles as Markdown files, converted them to PDF, and printed them for reading later. See My read-later service is made of paper.

I wanted to see how reading PDFs felt on the reMarkable, so I copied a few of my saved article PDFs to it. It turns out that I liked it very much. Highlighting text with the stylus works great, and I can even choose the color of the highlights, which don't display on the device, but they do on the actual PDF.

My only complaint was that the text was too small. To fix this, I made a new Pandoc template so that the font was larger, and the margins were smaller. I included some extra room on the right, so that the reMarkable toolbar doesn't cover the text. The script outputs the PDF directly to the Dropbox folder I have synced with the tablet. Here's how it looks with the updated template.

A PDF using my updated Pandoc template
A PDF using my updated Pandoc template

Nice, eh?

I create these by converting articles to Markdown using the Markdownload plugin. From there, I open the file in BBEdit and run a shell script which runs Pandoc to generate the PDF. Both the script and Pandoc template can be found here if you're interested. Note that they would need to be tweaked for your environment. This can easily be done via command line or just a shell script, but I've had it configured via BBEdit for so long that it's habit.