📖 Elevate Your Reading Game with Kobo Elipsa 2E!
The Kobo Elipsa 2E is a cutting-edge eReader featuring a 10.3” glare-free touchscreen, ComfortLight PRO, and 32GB of storage, allowing users to read, write, and annotate eBooks and PDFs effortlessly. Designed with eco-friendly materials, it combines sustainability with advanced technology for a superior reading experience.
Item Weight | 13.62 Ounces |
Item Dimensions L x W x Thickness | 8.9"L x 7.5"W x 0.3"Th |
Night vision | No |
Battery Average Life | 2 Hours |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Display Technology | Electronic Ink |
RAM Memory Installed | 32 GB |
Human-Interface Input | Touchscreen |
Color | Black |
Processor Speed | 2 GHz |
Battery Type | Lithium-Ion |
Screen Size | 10.3 Inches |
Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
Bluetooth support? | No |
File Format | |
Additional Features | Improved note-taking experience, Kobo Stylus 2 compatibility, Notebook creation and organization, Eco-friendly design |
J**N
Bright, big screen, web browser for direct downloads.
I am very happy with this Kobo reader. I've owned kindles over the years, but the screens were too small and it was annoying to get books from outside the amazon ecosystem installed.The Kobo has its own ecosystem/web store, which seems fine. I am more interested in reading public domain and other non-copy protected books. For that, I find that the built in web browser is great; you just point it at the Epub site you are using, and download directly.For academic papers (JSTOR), this would be an OUTSTANDING reader, since it handles PDFs very nicely. The 10 inch screen is a must for PDFs.The pen and note taking abilities are a great bonus as well. I find that the pen keeps up amazingly well with rapid handwriting; no irritating lag at all. Very well executed firmware and UI, in my opinion.
D**I
Great e-reader
I've been using the Kobo Elipsa 2E for about three months, and it’s very good. The 10.3-inch screen is a nice upgrade from my previous 7-inch reader, especially for PDFs—no more struggling with navigation as the whole page fits well. It’s great for bedtime reading, with a comfortable light and very good screen quality.That said, the" Elipsa 2E Black Sleepcover" is quite expensive at around $70 in the US (but I've got one, and still recommend it, because of good quality) . While the cover is good, I feel it should be bundled with the eReader at a reduced price. Another drawback is with the Notebook software; when using the stylus, it gets confused by input from the bottom of the palm (near the wrist) while writing. It would be great to have an option to disable touch input for that part of the hand and accept stylus-only input, but I couldn’t find this setting.
B**Y
Build quality isn't the best for the price
Build quality isn't premium feeling for the price. Where you grip with your thumb, the screen sinks down somewhat and has a wavy pattern.I have a kindle scribe for the same price and the kindle is so much better build.The writing isn't the best either. Lags behind a lot and it doesnt pick up some stuff sometimes.Other than those two things I loved how bright the screen was and it is lighter than the scribe so it was nicer to hold for longer periods.I have returned this one and trying to decide if I want to reorder to try to see if the next one doesnt have the weird screen problems
E**Y
Best large e reader available
First off, I’m well aware this is marketed as a note taking device, and it does that just fine. However my primary use is using it as a large screen e reader. The screen brightness and yellow light settings are marvelous, I only have it at 45% brightness and that’s plenty. The large screen estate fits more than your standard 6-7” e readers and I love it! I know Amazon has their own but I ultimately chose kobo because of the customization options for the fonts. I don’t like how limited the Amazon one was and this has opened up so many other font options as well as like thickness, like spacing, etc. The battery life is a dream, given something this large it well sufficient. Got it out of the box on full battery, read for a whole day nonstop and it only went down to 90 by the 3rd day in the afternoon. Truly the dream e reader. I only wish it had page turn buttons.
H**Y
Stylus 2 defective upon arrival, poor resolution for PDF reading
The device was shipped very fast it came from Amazon Warehouse and not directly from Kobo-Rakuten Canada. All good for 24 hours until the Stylus 2 stopped working. It's dead. Defective from the factory I presume. Also, the first Kobo I owned that is not made in Taiwan, it's made in China. Not trying to use "guilty by association" but just feel that there's always something wrong that is obvious and some not so much but will rear its ugly head soon enough. Anyway, though I'd like to just keep using it, I just don't feel comfortable as I am a bit nervous about what else will eventually fail prematurely.Lastly, I have purchased the Elipsa to mainly leverage its large screen to read PDFs and annotate with its writing capabilities. However, there are two major flaws. First, although the PDF can be enlarged or shrunk to fit the entire screen, the letter contrast on the screen could be clearer and there's no way to customize it. I have no such issue with my Remarkable 2 with contrast - and it is sharper and has nearly unlimited levels of grayness which allows it to reproduce illustrations way better than the Kobo. Second, once I resize it on the screen, it's very easy to knock it off alignment then I need to re-adjust it again over and over, this is very annoying. I also noticed that it lacks the feature where if I want to change a page, it does not allow me to use either a "tap & swipe" or "swipe" but no "tap only" So back to my point, Remarkable 2 is hands down better for PDF but does not have backlighting and very limited features as a capable Reader.Another handicap is its writing capability. It's not terrible but it's not great either. My benchmark is Remarkable 2. It does not come close. The writing capability of the Kobo Elipsa 2 feels ancient compares to the Remarkable 2. First, the marker needs to be charged before you can use it; RM2 does not. Second, when writing on the screen, RM2 feels like real paper; the Kobo Elipsa 2 feels like you're writing on the car's windshield. And the lag is quite noticeable as the pen is far ahead of where the actual line shows up. And there's no way to adjust the thickness of the lines. Lastly, the pen feels like it's hovering over the screen whereby the RM2, appears as the line and the market tip are touching each other as you write.Elipsa 2E does have more features for reading eBooks but the display with its lower resolution and lack of finite shades of grades severely handicaps being a good PDF reader. Another issue is that I purchased the OEM sleep cover with the Elipsa 2E which is very expensive. I've had a good experience with Clara 2E's OEM sleepover so I took a chance. Other than its ability to provide that auto-sleeping capability, it lacks two major functions. Ability to use it as a stand such as the Clara 2E's sleep cover (origami folding stand) and provide protection for the back of the unit. It has neither. Not only that, the part that bends wobbles so when closed, the magnetic part pulls the bottom side down which misaligns where the top corner is exposed. You have to slide it down then it aligns. Poor Q/A in my opinion, and this is also another reason I try to stay away from products made in China. They always seem to have some issue in the beginning or eventually and you wind up hating it over time. I rarely had this issue with Kobos made in Taiwan.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 months ago