![]() Bamboo Paper does not do anything that other note apps, like Notability, don’t already do. I just have it in my head that Wacom, an industry leader, should be bringing products to the market that exceed the feature sets and usability of other products/apps already out there. There is nothing inherently wrong with Bamboo Paper, just like there is nothing wrong with the Bamboo Stylus. I’m pretty sure I just listed everything that this app does.ĭon’t get me wrong. ![]() You can export an image to your photo library. You can email your notebook or an individual page as a pdf or image. The directions reference the front page as the “library,” so perhaps more notebooks are in the works. Sure it has unlimited pages with bookmarks, but that is a poor substitute. ![]() Bamboo Paper's lack of features makes it useful for only the most basic doodling. Add in a single size eraser and I’ve listed the full tool line-up. ![]() There are 6 colors-three of them blues-and three line thicknesses, not very far apart. The drawing engine uses speed to determine line thickness within a small range, giving a natural look to what you write. What follows is more of a first impression than a full review.īamboo Paper gives a clean interface with simple controls that are, unfortunately, locked in the portrait orientation. ![]() It is the perfect compliment for the Bamboo stylus both leave me wondering why Wacom bothered. It’s pitched as “a natural and realistic writing and sketching application tool” as a “perfect complement to the Bamboo Stylus for iPad.” After playing with it for the day, I agree. It came to my attention this morning that Wacom, the purveyor of drawing tablets for your computer, has issued yet another iPad product under their Bamboo brand: Bamboo Paper. ![]()
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