- Montblanc makes a digital paper notebook
- It costs $ 905 / £ 750 / AU $ 1,490
- It comes with 64 GB of storage and what looks like a 10.3-inch screen
Montblanc, the German luxury goods manufacturer, has decided to expand its advanced letterhead area to the digital world with the new Montblanc Digital Paper. As you would expect, the E -Incidental -Tablet is appropriate animal.
According to Montblanc’s store page, the digital paper will set you back $ 905 / £ 750 / AU $ 1,490, and in return you get a black and white digital notepad and pen with 64 GB storage space for your sketches and handwritten notes.
It supports Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 5.4 connection self-latter is only for the pen-and it can link with Montblanc Digital Paper Companion app (which can be downloaded on both Android and iOS devices) to share your scribbles with your other tech.
Look at
Montblanc has not revealed the screen size yet, but the site says the digital paper is “4.9 mm x 191 mm x 222 mm,” which would give us a maximum possible screen size of 11.5 inches. When you explain the framework, it will be less than this, so we guess about 10.3 inches, given that it is a regular size for e-notebooks.
Notebooks Such as the Amazon Kindle Scribe and Kobo Elipsa 2e, which Notably Cost Considerably Less Than This MontBlanc Device – Coming in at $ 449.99 / $ 429.99 / AU $ 729 OR $ 399.99 / £ 349.99 / AU $ 629.95 Respective Boast Very Similar Specs (Though The Kobo Comes With Only 32GB Storage).
You can download Montblanc Digital Paper in one of a trio of colors – cool gray, mystery black, elixir gold (which is a kind of mastic tan color) – and you can customize your digital notebook with one of a quartet of folio covering – ink blue, Antarctica, black or mastic – which will put you back $ 205 / £ 170 / AU $ 335 A Pop.
You can also pick up a replacement for $ 275 / £ 230 / AU $ 450 as well as pointed replacements that come in boxes of eight for $ 40 / £ 34 / AU $ 70. There is linen, matte and smooth tip options, each offering different properties for how the tip slides over the digital paper to simulate the different tactile experiences you would get from a proper pen and paper.
Now we haven’t reviewed the Montblanc tablet yet, but to double the price (or close to double) of its similarly specified competitors, it is unlikely to win some prices for being excellent value for money.
But if you are in love with the Montblanc Signature Styles, have long been dependent on its advanced stationery and want to enter the digital age with them, or have been after a digital paper slate with an elevated sophistication of what you can get from Kobo, Amazon or the rest, then this could be the opportunity for you.



