








📚 Elevate your digital paper game—where productivity meets sleek innovation.
The BOOX Tab X 13.3 ePaper Tablet PC features a large, ultra-crisp 13.3-inch E Ink display with a 50% thinner touch layer for enhanced clarity. It offers four smooth refresh modes powered by an exclusive GPU and Boox Super Refresh Technology, ensuring seamless reading and app use. The tablet-like interface includes customizable widgets and navigation, while a built-in gravity sensor enables automatic screen rotation. With versatile software capabilities like hyperlink insertion and cross-device syncing, the Tab X is designed for professionals seeking a premium digital paper experience.






| Display Type | E INK |
| Compatible Devices | Personal Computer |
| Native Resolution | 2200x1650 |
| Operating System | Android |
| Additional Features | E INK |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 12.2"L x 9"W |
| Item Weight | 128 Grams |
| Screen Size | 13.3 Inches |
A**A
This thing has a great balance between technology and paper reading. This is not a cheap device, but what it does is rare. It has allowed me to stop printing out journal articles and be able to utilize this instead as it combines analog and digital experiences in a integrated way. This does not mean that it does not have it's weaknesses, but what it does well, one can easily overlook the weaknesses. I have been wishing for a device where I can read letter-sized articles without zooming out. Because if it isn't zoomed at 100% it is hard to read and does not resemble reading a printed out page. What is amazing that you can highlight and underline digitally and use a pen (their included pen is decent, but take a look at the wacom pen with button erase function). The pen function is great because it allows you to markup a paper like you would with pen/pencil. Onyx also gives a lot of customization such that you can choose amongst a lot of different styles of marking style (pen, pencile, etc) and change the color and thickness. This really adds to experience a digital device like paper. I had a max lumi 2 but upgraded to this and this is an even better version. This device has gotten me to jump into reading much more easily that I am reading much more with little resistance. The e-ink experience is much better for reading vs looking at a digital screen that we do all the time for work, so the shift to e-ink is really nice and gives the reader a thoughtful experience that shifts away from "digital" experiences. Another plus is that this device is running on Android and thus can access the Google Play store. So although I'd see this as a primary reading device, you can browse, use all the apps, as a way to quickly access without picking up another device while you read. Definitely worth it for those that want to read more or just love reading and want an eco-friendly way over printing out a lot of pages.
M**3
Excelente tableta para contadores, abogados, medicos o aquellos que necesiten leer muchos articulos, libros o revistas en linea, tiene google play y puedes mandar archivos desde tu computadora a la tablet con la aplicación propia de onyx boox.
C**Y
*UPDATE* I have bumped the rating up to full stars. If you purchase this device, knowing its limitations (it is not an iPad and should not be compared with one), it is an absolutely great reader and I continue to be thoroughly impressed with their native PDF viewer, NeoReader. The level of detail and thought they have put into it is really evident and they nailed it. I moved to the eink world due to eyestrain issues with my iPad Pro, and the difference is tremendous. I find the e-ink screen soothing to my eyes after looking at the iPad, and I use the iPad less and less (the iPad will always be great for entertainment, however). *OLD REVIEW* This device is not an iPad. Do not expect one. It is an absolute powerhouse that can allow you to browse the internet, but it really shines as a reader, whether Kindle, Kobo, etc. as it has access to the Google play store. It is also excellent for PDF reading and has the best software I have seen in its native Neoreader. The notetaking is also a really excellent experience. They have clearly put a great deal of time into their software though, as always there can be improvements.
S**D
I bought this to read PDF music files playing live. Screen size is perfect and it looks good. Some of my PDF files take 2 pages, some 1. I use the "landscape" mode to read 2 pages side by side and the Portrait mode if it's only 1 page. The problem is, it won't save what orientation I'm using for each file. Every time I open a file, I have to re-set what the orientation is...and that is not easy. Several steps. Simply can't do it in a live gig situation. Sometimes it auto-rotates, sometimes it doesn't. If it doesn't auto rotate into landscape mode, I have to open a screen to click auto-rotate again and click another screen to "fit" the pages to those screens. The audience doesn't want to watch me do that. lol. I have looked everywhere for a solution to this and I have tried everything. It should be able to do this, right? Shouldn't be hard to figure it out. Good luck on trying to find any help. Expensive Paper weight.
P**1
Summary: the Boox Tab X is pretty much the best e-reader *for me* , but your mileage may vary depending on what you want. As background, I read *a lot* of PDFs, primarily academic papers, and I annotate constantly. My workflow before was using PDF Expert on an iPad Pro to sync with Google Drive. From a technical standpoint, this worked extremely well. The recent iPad Pros with the second generation pencil are in so many ways excellent products, and if you're happy with reading PDFs on an iPad I highly recommend PDF Expert as your goto app (there's a price tag but for me it was well worth it). However my eyes were getting worn down by reading so much on an LED screen, and God help me but the iPad Pro is *so* powerful it's impossible not to get distracted with other apps and the internet. I wanted an e-paper alternative that would be easier on the eyes and easier on my attention span. I first bought a Remarkable 2. On the good side, I found it intuitive to use and impressive for notetaking, both in responsiveness and feel. And I like the weight of the Remarkable 2 premium pencil more than the Boox. On the downside, the Google Drive integration is a bit clunky and just one-way, the screen was still too small for me for many PDFs, and there's no backlight. The Boox Tab X was my second attempt. Let me get the bad out of the way up front. First, it's expensive (though all told not much more expensive than the Remarkable 2 if you get a case and a premium pen for each). Second, Boox touts the Tab X as an Android tablet, but potential buyers should be *very clear* about what that actually means here: this is *absolutely not* an iPad replacement if you want to be able to watch movies, look at color photos, or play games. This is still a black-and-white e-reader, full stop; you do have access to the Google Play store which opens up more possibilities than your typical e-reader but you are not going to be watching Netflix on this device ever. Third, the integrated Boox apps (Library, Notes, etc) are quite good but their user interfaces are not nearly as intuitive as the Remarkable 2. *Read the manual* on this one or else you might miss some powerful features or important settings. Fourth, this is very much a matter of personal preference, but the included Boox pro pen 2 was a mixed bag: it's noticeably lighter than the Remarkable 2 premium pen which I did not like, but the eraser on the Boox feels smoother and more natural to use. However you can mix and match any EMR style with the Boox so that should absolutely not be a deal breaker. And relatedly: the Boox pen is magnetic but oddly the Tab X has no surface for magnetically attaching the pen. Something else to note here: I would not reflexively call the Boox Tab X "heavy", but the tablet alone is 1lb 4oz and the case adds another 8oz. So 2lbs altogether, which is certainly not a laptop but far beyond a typical 10" or less e-reader. I am not listing the size/weight here as a "bad" because life is full of trade-offs and this was one I made with eyes wide open, but buyers should be aware. Part of this problem would be solved if the Boox Tab X had other case options besides the one Boox offers. Now the good. The 13.3" A4 screen (very close to standard US 8.5 x 11" letter size) is beautiful and displays full-size PDFs perfectly. There's both warm and cold backlighting a la the Kindle Oasis. Speaking of which, I downloaded the Kindle app from Google Play, synced my account, and changed some basic settings to make the text larger, and I was off to the races reading my Kindle books in less than 5 minutes. The integrated "Library" app has two-way Google Drive integration out of the box (as well as OneDrive and some other services) and its built-in PDF reader is very responsive and similar to PDF Expert. It's a pleasure to read on this device, my eyes have thanked me multiple times. The integrated Notes app looks and reacts very similarly to the Remarkable 2 (the Remarkable 2's screen has a texture that feels more like paper than the Tab X, however the Tab X is not as "glassy" a feel as, say, the iPad Pro (and others have recommended Doodroo screen protectors to get a full paper feel; I plan on trying them out). Will also note that I have used for several weeks, often with the back light on, and I have been very impressed with the battery life. So the bottom line is that this is a great, perhaps the best, e-reader for a specific kind of person: you want to be able to read documents and take notes on a full-sized A4/US Letter screen, you aren't looking for a full-functionality tablet with color and video capabilities, and you don't want the eye strain that comes with reading on an LED screen. If you're that person, absolutely give this e-reader a close look. If you're not, however, then note that this is a great e-reader but it comes with trade-offs, so be clear-eyed about what those are before you buy.
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