Radio
Now Playing
Quickyla Radio โ€” Click to play
Open โ†’
3 min left
Back to News

I ditched my Kindles, but Amazon could win me back with one launch

Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. Iโ€™ve been carrying Kindles around for well over a decade, but recently, Amazon has done a pretty good job of convincing users to look elsewhere . Between the companyโ€™s restrictive ecosystem and my growing

I ditched my Kindles, but Amazon could win me back with one launch
Android Authority โ€” 9 June 2026
Text:
13 0 0

Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more.

Iโ€™ve been carrying Kindles around for well over a decade, but recently, Amazon has done a pretty good job of convincing users to look elsewhere . Between the companyโ€™s restrictive ecosystem and my growing concerns about what I even own when I buy digital books, Iโ€™ve spent the past year hopping between e-reader brands. Meanwhile, competitors keep getting better. Iโ€™ve dipped into BOOX, Kobo, and reMarkable devices, and some have shown me features I wish Amazon would borrow immediately. Theyโ€™ve also made me appreciate just how polished Kindles are, and how comfortable the familiar experience feels.

I want Amazon to make a lot of changes to Kindle. Iโ€™m also realistic enough to know most of them probably arenโ€™t going to happen. But one feels both achievable and overdue: a phone-sized Kindle Scribe. Iโ€™ve been asking for a portable Scribe since 2024 , and after spending time with similar devices from other brands, itโ€™s become my single biggest Kindle wish. Amazon could keep making decisions I disagree with, and Iโ€™d still probably stick around if I could just grab a pocketable e-reader with stylus support.

At this point, I donโ€™t think Iโ€™m asking Amazon for anything particularly radical. The BOOX Palma 2 proved thereโ€™s real demand for a phone-sized e-reader, and reMarkableโ€™s smaller devices like the Move have shown that note-taking doesnโ€™t require a massive display. In my mind, the ideal device would land right around the size of my smartphone, so yes, even smaller than a 6-inch basic Kindle. I want it just large enough to comfortably read books and annotate documents, but small enough to slip into the back pocket of my womenโ€™s jeans.

And yes, I already know the obvious counterargument that I should just use the Kindle app on my smartphone. I already do. But while I appreciate the app for supplementing my e-reader experience, I donโ€™t want it to be where I primarily consume books. First, it drains my battery. Missing an important call because my phone died mid-reread of Harry Potter is embarrassing for a number of reasons. Secondly, my phone is a black hole of distraction thatโ€™s more likely to lead me down a rabbit hole of group texts or scrolling than into a book. Most importantly, though, it lacks the comfortable, paper-like experience that makes e-ink displays so uniquely suited to reading.

Then thereโ€™s the key component: note-taking. Scribbling thoughts on an e-ink display with a stylus feels natural in a way that writing on a glossy smartphone screen never could. I want to feel like a beat reporter carrying a spiral-topped reporterโ€™s notebook, not a millennial tapping away at a phone. If taking notes on my phone were the answer, I wouldnโ€™t still be asking Amazon for a pocket-sized Scribe.

In short: Iโ€™m begging Amazon for a truly portable device with proper stylus support and seamless syncing with my Kindle library. The standard Kindle and Kindle Paperwhite are reasonably portable, but neither supports a stylus. The Kindle Scribe supports writing, but at 10.2 inches, itโ€™s closer to a notebook than something Iโ€™d casually slip into a pocket.

Testing the BOOX Palma 2 showed me how much I enjoy reading on a phone-sized e-ink screen. Its 6.13-inch display and pocket-friendly footprint make it one of the most portable e-readers available today. The problem is that it lacks stylus support and feels more like a very adept minimalist phone than a true Kindle alternative. The reMarkable Paper Pro Move gets much closer with its 7.3-inch display and writing-first design, but it lacks a built-in ebook library, and Iโ€™d like to see Amazon go even smaller.

Advertisement
React:
Sponsored

More to Read

Cash App made a magic wand for contactless payments
๐Ÿ’ป Technology
Cash App made a magic wand for contactless payments
The Verge ยท 9 days ago
Meta is reportedly developing an AI pendant
๐Ÿ’ป Technology
Meta is reportedly developing an AI pendant
TechCrunch ยท 14 days ago
Coders are refusing to work without AIย โ€”ย and that could comโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ’ป Technology
Coders are refusing to work without AIย โ€”ย and that could come back to bite them
TechCrunch ยท 15 days ago
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemicalโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ”ฌ Science
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancโ€ฆ
Live Science ยท 14 days ago
CBS News insiders worry how 60 Minutes will endure after fiโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ’ฐ Business
CBS News insiders worry how 60 Minutes will endure after firings: โ€˜What are they going toโ€ฆ
Guardian Business ยท 10 days ago
Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billionโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billion tokens a month โ€” and they're โ€ฆ
Business Insider Mkt ยท 10 days ago
Full view