Fujitsu has been teasing a color e-notebook for years. It has finally unveiled its new product, the Fujitsu Quaderno A4C, which will soon go on sale. This new PDF productivity device has a Kaleido 3 e-paper display. It also has a competent system for taking notes, freehand drawing, and reading books. Quaderno is in its third generation of e-notebooks and has gotten better at the entire experience. This device has a UI in Japanese and English. English is especially notable since it widens its appeal to an international market.
The Fujitsu Quaderno A4 Color features a flexible 13.3-inch Kaleido 3 e-paper display with a black and white resolution of 1650 x 2200 and 207 PPI. It can display 4096 colors and has a color resolution of 103 PPI. The screen has a capacitive touch panel compatible with finger input and is electromagnetic induction digitizer-compatible. The device’s body is white alongside the bezel and a dark grey on the back. The screen is slightly sunken and does not have a layer of glass protecting it, making the colors shine.
A dark grey stylus, with an eraser button on top and a highlight button on the side, is included for free with your purchase. The stylus magnetically attaches to the side of the Quaderno. It has 4096 degrees of pressure sensitivity, which provides lighter or thicker lines the harder you press. Eight colors are available for writing and drawing. This dramatically improves visual organization, learning effectiveness, and convenience in business and music scenes. Bookmark your most important PDF documents or notes on the home screen.
The Quaderno has 32GB of internal storage, holding 10,000 PDF files. It also has Wi-Fi on the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, Bluetooth 5.1, and a USB-C port for transferring files from your PC or Mac. There are two weeks of battery life of constant usage. The device measures 222.8mm x 301.1mm x 5.7mm and weighs 368g. It is available from the Good e-Reader Store for $719.99.
Michael Kozlowski is the editor-in-chief at Good e-Reader and has written about audiobooks and e-readers for the past fifteen years. Newspapers and websites such as the CBC, CNET, Engadget, Huffington Post and the New York Times have picked up his articles. He Lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.