Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA-00002)

By · Sunday, January 23rd, 2011
Best Digital Voice Recorder

Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA-00002)

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Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA-00002)
Capture Everything: The Livescribe Smartpen records audio and links it to what you write. Missed something? Tap on your notes or drawings with the tip of your Livescribe Smartpen to hear what was said while you were writing. No Need to Lug the Laptop: The Livescribe Smartpen automatically captures everything as you write and draw. Transfer your notes to your computer, organize them, and even search for words within your notes. Find what you want in seconds. Share Your Notes: Transform your notes and audio into interactive movies. Upload your creations online for everyone to see, hear and play. The 1.3 oz. anodized aluminum Livescribe™ Smartpen records audio and links it what you write. The 1GB of memory can hold over 100 hours of recording. Actual time may vary. Requires Windows XP with service pack 2 or Windows Vista

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List Price: $ 169.95

Price: $ 149.99

Livescribe Echo 8GB Smartpen▲Digital Pen▲Digital Voice Recorder RRP $329
180836320616 0 Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA 00002)AU $102.50 (19 Bids)
End Date: Wednesday Mar-14-2012 3:50:13 PDT
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By G. Ware Cornell Jr. "anotherlawyer" on January 23rd, 2011 at 4:14 am
404 of 437 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Relax and join the Revolution-BREAKING NEWS-Mac Desktop available 2/17/09, July 13, 2008
By 
G. Ware Cornell Jr. “anotherlawyer” (Weston FL) –
(VINE VOICE)
  
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
  
(REAL NAME)
  

This review is from: Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA-00002) (Electronics)

My brother ordered two of these pens when they were first available from the manufacturer. His thinking apparently was that he would have a backup should he ever lose one. Quickly realizing that he might have over-ordered, he offered one to me to try.

There were a lot of reasons I was not enthusiastic about his offer. The first was that unlike my brother, I actually do lose pens from time to time, even expensive ones. So if I lost this thing I would owe my brother money. Second, I am a Mac enthusiast and the desktop software for a Mac platform will not be available until the end of 2008. Finally, the necessity of the product escaped me.

But being a toy lover I put aside my objections and accepted his loan. A few weeks later I was calling customer support on a desktop issue (I installed it on my only Windows computer, a Toshiba tablet). The problem was a software glitch, since in reality the pen was still in beta. The customer service rep solving the problem asked if it was registered in my name. I assured her it was. I then told her that my brother had bought the pen but that he was never getting it back. I could hear my statement relayed around the support department where it was greeted with shouts and laughter. They knew. I was a convert. I had drunk the Kool-aid and was forever theirs.

Okay so what do I use it for? I take it to hearings and depositions (I am a lawyer, remember?). These are public events under Florida law and there is no reasonable expectation of privacy.This is important since the pen doesn’t just record the strokes of the pen, it records everything being said. And it records it very well. Here is the cool part, touch a word in your notes and you will hear whatever was happening at that time. My favorite demonstration to date is to touch a word from a contested trial where I got to ask a witness if he had ever told people that he spoke to the dead and that they spoke back to him. The guy nearly came across the table at me, a point also recorded. Now an aside to lawyers, law students and pro se litigants-do not ever ask someone this question unless you have an email from the witness attesting to his ability to commune with the formerly alive.

The recording capacity of this pen is astonishing. The manufacturer suggests that the 2GB pen will hold 200 hours of audio. I have no reason to doubt it, since constant use has barely tapped its capacity.

When the pen is uploaded to the desktop software (currently Windows only) images of the notes and the audio are loaded into the computer. From there it can be uploaded to an online site where it is Mac accessible. For now this satisfies my Mac needs at least till the end of the year.

You need special paper to take advantage of the upload features. Fortunately, the supplies are reasonably priced and available online. However the notebook supplied with the pen is most generous.

There are lots of other features in the pen. It is possible to draw a keyboard and play notes (musical notes) on it. My daughter, a music ed major, particularly enjoys this. There is even a cute animation demo built in whose 3-D sound as heard through the earbuds is astonishing and mildly amusing.

So who could use this pen other than trial lawyers? Students seem to be a logical group. Perhaps physicians and nurses could use it. Did the patient really say he had a condition or did he say something else? Livescribe needs to produce industry specific paper for just such uses, or to allow outside vendors to create it.

This product will revolutionize the workplace in ways that we cannot now predict. All we can predict is that it will prove to be one of the most significant technologies of this decade in the same way the personal computer was in the 1980s. Click the”Buy” button now. You will not regret it.

BREAKING NEWS

The Mac Desktop (not the Beta) promised for the first quarter of 2009 will be available on 11/24/08 for download at [...]. It promises certain enhancements over the original windows software and the original beta released in November, 2008,

“The Mac version of Livescribe Desktop also offers two additional features not available in the Windows version. First, Mac users will have the ability to export their recordings into AAC audio files. Mac users can also export their notes as PDF files directly from the Desktop application. All current and new users of the Pulse smartpen can use Pulse with Mac computers for free. “

Addendum: As of February 2009 a full version of the Livescribe Desktop for Mac is available for download free to registered users. The Mac Desktop is fully functional and comparable but not identical to the Windows desktop. The Mac version lacks one major feature at this time-the ability to print the special paper found in the Windows version. Some users have reported that they are…

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By G. Tremblay on January 23rd, 2011 at 4:41 am
391 of 427 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Useless in lecture halls, October 16, 2008
By 
G. Tremblay
(REAL NAME)
  

This review is from: Livescribe 2GB Pulse Smartpen (APA-00002) (Electronics)

This product was prematurely launched. It does not record lectures very well at all in typical lecture halls, regardless whether or not you wear the dorky earphones and regardless what setting you select for sound recording. Any ambient noise, no matter how quiet, will be picked up by the device. This noise will completely mask the speaker’s voice, rendering the recording essentially useless.

Because the file formats are proprietary, you cannot load the noisy files into audio processing software to filter out the noise or amplify the speaker’s voice. The need for the headphones (which serve as microphones) makes the pen obtrusive in a corporate environment, where one may want to save audio recordings of meetings while taking notes.

The pen has a built in microphone, but it is useless in a large room. It is often recommended that one use the headphones (wearing them around one’s neck), but in normal environments with air conditioning or computers nearby, the only thing you’ll record is noise.

The pen does faithfully record the notes you make if you use the company’s special notebooks. These contain an array of dots that tell the pen where it’s located on the page. This information is stored as you write. When you upload the pen’s contents to your computer, an image of what you wrote is regenerated. This is of course a neat trick, but you have to use their file format and user interface, and I find it is not sufficiently flexible. Not being able to use standard file formats like mp3 and pdf is a real nuisance. Apparently you can upload your files to the company’s web site and they’ll convert them to pdf for you, but what if your notes contain private or proprietary information? And even if it’s just your math notes, who wants the hassle?

This device may be suitable for some students if the lecture room and level of ambient noise are appropriate for the pen’s limited ability to capture clean sound. This is not a trivial problem, because in its current state, unless you’re recording in an ideal environment, the noise will make it impossible to hear the lecture when you play it back. You do not notice these faint background noises most of the time, but that’s essentially all the pen will record.

I gave up on the pen and frankly don’t even know where it is at the moment. Too bad, because I got the one with 2GB of memory along with about a dozen of their special notebooks. Now I just use them with an ordinary pen and record my lectures using a digital recorder I got from Ramsay Electronics. Its sound quality is perfect, regardless where I sit, and it can record in any format I choose.

I am disappointed in the unbalanced reviews I’ve read about this pen. One has to wonder if some of the more enthusiastic ones are from the company itself. Likewise, I found reviews online that were so slick, detailed, and positive that they had to have come from the pen maker. I have never written a review before but after reading reviews that gave this device unqualified praise, I felt it my duty to warn other potential purchasers–let the buyer beware.

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