Description
The Hanvon N10 Max features a 13.3-inch E Ink display. Hanvon said the N10 Max comes with a flexible screen micro-suspension design, which gives the surface a soft and elastic feel. The company said this will add to the writing pleasure as it mimics the feel you have when writing on a thick sheet of paper. Hanvon said this makes for a more natural writing experience than you have while writing on a plastic or glass surface that can be slippery at times.
Hanvon further stated the 13.3-inch display of the N10 Max does not emit harmful blue light. The A4-sized display area is also 40 percent more than the N10, Touch, which comes with a 10.3-inch E Ink display. The company’s proprietary 16-level grayscale algorithm also backs the display, which simulates a 256-level grayscale display. Accompanying the N10 Max is the company’s very own wireless passive electromagnetic pen that does not need to be charged separately. The pen, which sports a lovely shade of darkish purple, offers support for 4096 levels of pressure sensitivity and comes with two integrated replacement refills. The N10 Max 2024 edition is white.
The N10 Max otherwise features a 1.8 GHz quad-core RK3566 processor coupled to a massive 8B of LPDDR4X memory and 128 GB of storage, which puts it in the notebook category. There is also an SD card capable of additional storage. The e-note device runs Android 11 and has a massive 6000 mAh battery. Connectivity options it supports include Bluetooth 5.0 and Wi-Fi, while there is a USB Type-C port. There are dual speakers and two microphones onboard, too. Despite its size, the e-note is slim at 6.6mm while weighing 480 grams.
Besides the impressive hardware specs, the Hanvon N10 Max also has some excellent software features. Those include a voice transcription feature in real-time, which supports handwriting, transcription, and recording. Equipped with the company’s latest-generation analysis core, the e-note offers an optimum reading experience covering more than ten of the most common document formats. Those include the likes of PDF, ePUB, TXT, PDF, EPUB, MOBI, and so on. The company also added more complex PDF files that will open and turn faster.
Also, with that much screen real estate on spare, it is all but natural the device supports a split-screen note-taking feature with simultaneous support for note-taking and reading. The e-note also comes with free and unlimited access to the company’s OCR tech developed in-house, which it claims can accurately and quickly recognize PDF or handwritten notes into editable texts. Plus, those can easily be shared as well.
Another cool feature of the device is the Reference News feature that comes integrated with and offers a customized collection of newspaper articles updated at 8 in the morning every day. Plus, a reading module supports the English language, apart from Mandarin and Cantonese. It offers several customization options, such as the choice of male or female voice, volume and speech rate adjustment, etc.