HTC Scribe

Where HTC really tries to break the mold with the Flyer is through its optional digital pen - the HTC Scribe. I refer to this as breaking the mold because with the advent of capacitive touch screen mobile devices, the stylus is all but extinct. What used to be commonplace in the days of the Palm V is now a relic of a forgotten time. Why would HTC then bring it back?

In our iPad 2 review I mentioned the tablet input problem. My issue with tablets isn't that input is fundamentally broken on them, because it's not. Rather a problem I have is that the types of input todays tablets are optimized for is fundamentally limited. Tablets like the iPad or Eee Pad provide a great touch and scroll experience, but typing suffers as a result of the lack of a physical keyboard. Note taking is also a problem - while drawing with your finger may be fun, it's not exactly as quick (or as clean/neat) as scribbling something down in a notepad. I believe the tablet as a form factor has a lot of room to grow and mature before the input problem is completely solved, and it'll like require a combination of inputs to truly perfect. The Flyer is simply HTC's attempt at evolving the platform.

So for $79.99 HTC will well you the Scribe, a battery powered digital pen that lets you take notes and annotate pretty much anything you see on the Flyer's display. Here's where HTC's software talents were really put to use.


The Scribe is powered by one AAAA battery

Take the Scribe and tap it anywhere on the Flyer's screen when it's unlocked, regardless of what app you're in. As soon as the Scribe hits the screen, HTC's software will pause the active app, take a screenshot of the current screen and display it for you for annotation.

You are then free to draw all over the screen as you see fit. When you're done just use your finger to swipe up the screen and you'll bring up a menu that lets you save the image, share it, print it or throw it away. Images you save are automatically added to the Notes application - unfortunately there's no way to avoid doing so and just save the capture to NAND. Images you share are stored as JPGs and at full 1024 x 600 resolution.

Remember the fourth button from the row of capacitive Android buttons on the face of the Flyer? It's only accessible via the Scribe. Tap on it and you'll get a popup menu to customize what your pen does. You can change ink colors, brush size and of course the tip style as well.

The pen has built in history so you can step through and undo actions with the pen. It also has an eraser tip that you can either choose through the popup menu or just hold the upper of two buttons on the pen to turn it into an eraser automatically.

The annotation features of the Flyer work surprisingly well. The biggest selling point (other than just screwing around with your brand new tablet) is if you need to share a slide, email or web page with someone else and make comments on it. Just browse to the document, email or web page you want to comment on, tap the screen with the pen and edit away. If the Flyer's screen were larger I could see this being a huge selling point for graphic designers, but with a 7-inch 1024 x 600 display you run out of room for notes really quickly (unless you're good at writing in very tiny letters using the Scribe).

If you aren't looking to mar up existing documents, there's also a dedicated Notes app that's designed to be a digital notebook. You can write in the notebook, use it to record audio (this is where the Flyer's two microphones come in handy) or even take photos and insert them in the middle of your notes.

HTC is particularly proud of the fact that its Notes app will correlate notes you're taking with audio recorded while you're taking them. For example, if you jot down a note a minute into your audio recording, upon playback you'll get a little marker identifying what you wrote down when that particular audio was recorded.

The Notes app will sync with Evernote so you get cloud storage of your notes and can access them on multiple devices without sharing. Evernote support is pretty cool as it all of the sudden makes the Flyer more useful since you don't need to always have it on you to access the notes you've taken. Logging in to the Evernote website gives you full access to all screenshots you've taken an inserted in the Flyer's Notes app as well as audio you've recorded in Notes. Notes are synced with Evernote in a matter of seconds after saving them on the Flyer, it's really quick.

Evernote does perform server side OCR (Optical Character Recognition) and as a result your handwritten notes are actually searchable through Evernote. The OCR worked surprisingly well. I searched for "web browsing" and this test note showed up on my Evernote account:

Unfortunately searching for the word "Twitter" yielded no results, so your mileage may vary.

I'd say if any tablet is really trying to be a productive device it's the Flyer. While it's still a niche device, Evernote integration is what really makes this niche work.

Writing in Notes works surprisingly well. You can alternate between using HTC's virtual keyboard and the Scribe. No one has figured out the way to provide natural feedback using a digital pen at this point so that aspect of the Scribe experience is still uncomfortable. The pen is sensitive enough to allow you to write without fatigue. Unfortunately resting your hand on the screen while you write can sometimes result in the Flyer sensing for finger rather than pen input. For the most part it works but if I didn't consciously start writing before my hand touched the screen the Notes app would pull up the virtual keyboard.

The Notes app is very functional but feels a bit more sluggish than I'd like. If you're trying to mimic the behavior of paper, the UI has to be seamless and HTC unfortunately doesn't deliver that experience flawlessly. Notes also only works in portrait mode, there is no landscape support. Overall the app and integration are better than expected and definitely usable, but not perfect.

HTC's Scribe also integrates very well with the Flyer's e-reader app: Reader. You can of course annotate pages of a book but you can also highlight passages - just hold the lower button on the Scribe and select your text.

Scribe integration continues even through HTC's PDF Viewer app. Here you can again annotate or highlight text. You can even save your changes with the Scribe's ink in a separate layer or flatten the document and save it as a single layer PDF (e.g. if you wanted to sign and return a PDF contract).

I have to say that overall what HTC has done with the Scribe in the Flyer goes above and beyond what I expected. I honestly thought it would be more of a gimmick but in reality it's actually well executed and useful.

Web Browsing & Other Apps The Display
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  • aranyagag - Tuesday, June 21, 2011 - link

    99.999% of the time. I am the only person in the surgery wards, OPD, and OTs carrying a tablet. Because my Samsung galaxy tab (the original 7 inch version) can fit into trouser pockets (even though just barely). There are four other people in my department who have iPads (both versions 1 and version 2), but they are always, and I repeat ALWAYS left at home. The only time when another tablet comes into our domain is when somebody from another department comes in with a galaxy tab (7 inch). This is because THEY say that instead of carrying along and iPad it is easier to carry along their laptops.
    It seems, however, that Samsung must have done a lot of research before deciding the dimensions of of my tablet, because even with a cover it refuses to fit into any pocket. This means that while it may fulfill one aspect of my use-- Using the tablet while on rounds, the HTC flyer cannot be carried as easily and hence is not as useful.
    To summarise, I would like to quote something that my head of the department said oon seeing me use my tablet, "I have an iPad 2 , but it remains on my bedside table acting as a radio".
  • Impulses - Tuesday, June 21, 2011 - link

    Altho I agree that it's too expensive (specially for a service that may forever lag behind the pack in OS updates), I do hope it does well enough for HTC to release a Flyer 2 next year. The digitizer is intriguing, particularly if it gains more app support.

    Personally I don't have a problem spending $500 on a tablet, but I know companies like ASUS will have brought prices down across the board within a few months... And there's still plenty of innovation to come from devices like this and the ASUS Transformer (part of what makes Android great imo).

    If the smartphone market is still in it's infancy, the tablet market is barely out of the womb...
  • chomlee - Wednesday, June 22, 2011 - link

    499 for a 7" pad???? I was hoping HTC was going to be the company to break the IPad streak like they did with the EVO and Iphone. What a joke. These marketing people at all the tablet companies should all be fired, except for Asus. Asus is the only company to offer a decent alternative at a lower price. What kind of idiot are you if you are trying to compete in a market and say " are device is going to be smaller than the competition, not as good, and with much less battery life, but we are going to charge the same".

    They need to take a lesson from Asus and realize that you can't offer a device that is "almost" as good as the current leader and charge the same. You either have to be noticably better, and/or cheaper.

    Maybe the only reason why they did so well with the EVO was because loyal sprint customers couldn't get an Iphone.
  • ap90033 - Wednesday, June 22, 2011 - link

    TOTALLY AGREE WITH YOU!!! Flyer=Fail...
  • ap90033 - Wednesday, June 22, 2011 - link

    Looks lame to me. To be so small it seems to have crappy battery life. Seems like the wanna be Tablet with a "special" UI that isnt really that awe inspiring. Its to big to be a phone, its to small to be a tablet. Its like a Phablet! I also dont get the reference to all the suck behind honeycomb. I have the Eee Pad with 3.1 and its GREAT. No issues, 9+ hours battery life and zippy performance. All for the low low price of $399 (that cheaper than the poser Flyer btw)... Maybe I am wrong here, but I feel a tablet and a phone are currently two different things. I bought a tablet as a fairly functional camera/browser/video/email/word processor type device and I have a Phone (HTC Evo running 2.3.3) for my phone and more on the go needs...
  • grenzo - Tuesday, July 5, 2011 - link

    I bought the 3g+WiFi 32gb Flyer with pen here in Singapore for usd730. For weeks I was waiting for the arrival of the 10in tegra 2 honeycomb tablets but I found that I wanted my tablet to be more portable, something I can carry without a bag and hold with one hand while standing in the train. 1.5ghz with 1gb ram is plenty powerful for this device. Games like Gun Bros and Pocket legends perform very well. It would have been great if this was running honeycomb but very happy with what HTC has done with HTC sense. I can wait until HTC is ready to upgrade this to hc. In the 7 in space the Flyer is way ahead of the rest. Yes it seems a lot of money to pay for the specs, but in terms of real world use this is a fast smooth tablet with a great screen. Web browsing, email, news, weather, games, all work almost perfectly. Camera is bad but i can live with that. Pen is just a nice plus. Evernote integration is great but I use the screen keyboard more often than the pen.

    I saw a video comparing the browsing speed of this and the iPad 2 and at times this came out faster. They also showed that Angry Birds loads slightly faster on this device than the iPad 2 but they still dissed the Flyer because of its processor and OS. Its not just what's on paper but you have to see how it actually performs.

    The other Android tablets like the ASUS transformer offer more value for money but i don't want to spend hundreds of dollars on a portable device that i will leave at home most of the time.

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