![]() ![]() Some websites only want PDF, some won't have them at all. Its useful for students like myself who are forced to use several different submission services at once. #Rocketbook notebook pdf#The second feature is a little less exciting, but is still useful when you make a scan, you can choose to format it as a PDF or as a Jpg. Your scans are also stored on the Rocketbook app itself. ![]() You can use Evernote, Onedrive, an email account, dropbox, or about a half dozen other things. The app can tell which bubble you fill in, and will send the scan to a pre-programmed location associated with that bubble (color in the apple, and the page goes to your pintrest board, color in the star and it goes to your onedrive, etc.) It keeps your online folders nice and tidy. If you've never seen a Rocketbook page before, there is a little row of bubbled symbols in the footer of each. There are two main features that set Rocketbook scanning apart from the scanning in other apps. It doesn't differ in speed or quality if you compare it to something like the Evernote scanning tool, if you are familiar with that. It is, essentially, a quick way to take pictures of your pages. The Rocketbook app uses your phone's camera to scan the Rocketbook pages (each has a QR code and a thin border of black ink, for better framing/scaling) and send them off to the hosting webservice of your choosing. If you don't know how the app works, read this paragraph. Apparently there were some glitches with it in the early days, back when Rocketbook was a newly funded Kickstarter, but the kinks have been straightened and the bugs have been squashed. The app, and the technology attached, is by far the best thing about Rocketbook. ![]() I'm talking about this first because most people talk about the erasable pages gimmick like it's all that RB has to offer, and it's not. ![]()
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