Especially as you can dump recordings onto your computer, or even the 'cloud'. Still, with over 200 hours of recording possible on the smaller version and double that for the 4GB one, you're still unlikely to struggle for space. These pens perform in exactly the same manner as the 8GB version being reviewed here – apart from the obvious difference in storage space. What's new with the Echo, in the UK at least, is the availability of more budget friendly 2GB and 4GB Echo pens - priced at £99.99 and £149.99 respectively - to live alongside the premium 8GB version. You choose to slow the speed down, speed it up or play at normal speed and there's even a timeline on the Livescribe pads for easy navigation. So, if you're in a presentation and the speaker says something interesting, simply write a word down to remind you of this comment and when you tap that word later, the recording from the moment you wrote it will play through the Echo's speaker. It can then take these memories and associated them to the sound recordings that the included microphone picks up at the same time. Rather, the smartpen tracks and remembers where ink is written, and knows the coordinates of items such as buttons. The camera does not see ink written by a user, nor does it see artwork on a page. The smartpen's location, derived from the coordinates, is interpreted by software, and mapped to an app in the smartpen. Which is nice, for a lower cost alternative, and for testing. You get a starter pad of paper in the box, but you can also print your own using a Adobe PostScript compatible, 600dpi, colour laser printer.
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