I have absolutely no business reviewing the Livescribe Symphony digital pen. As regular readers of my iPad Pro Diary will know, I Do Not Do Writing. Or drawing. I haven’t handwritten anything substantive for about three decades. If I’m writing anything more than a few lines, I’ll use a keyboard. If it’s shorter, I’ll generally dictate to Siri.
I did eventually find a vague excuse to buy an Apple Pencil, but even that was a bit of a stretch and I still don’t use it for anything else. All of which doesn’t make me an obvious candidate for a digital pen designed for use with paper …
But while I view paper notepads as quaint historical artifacts, my girlfriend loves them, for reasons I’ll let her explain.
So this is effectively a review by proxy: I’m just reporting back on her experiences.
I love the way I can completely make a notebook my own. I love doodling, for example, so something that started as very straightforward notetaking becomes art.
What is the Livescribe Symphony digital pen anyway?
I may have no use for one personally, but it’s definitely something I consider a cute gadget.
It’s a conventional pen, which writes on paper, with a couple of additions. First, a camera, pointed down at the nib. This records everything the pen writes and transmits a digital version of it to a companion device – an iPhone or an iPad.
It can do this live – whatever you write or draw appearing on your iDevice in real-time – or it can store more than 1,000 US letter pages worth of writing and drawing for syncing later. It does this via a number of different cloud services, including Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneNote. It can also feed your notes into Evernote.
You can choose the format in which your words are stored: either the original handwritten text, or it can use built-in optical character recognition to turn them into plain text.
Second – and this is what distinguishes it from most other digital pens on the market – there’s a microphone. You can activate this when you want to capture live sound alongside your notes. This would obviously be useful for things like lectures and interviews, where you can jot down summary notes and then easily play the accompanying audio for any section of it.
To activate the microphone, you tap a recording symbol that is printed on each page of the notepads. Tap the stop symbol to stop it. Neat!
How does it work?
If using a camera to capture pen movements sounds pretty damn clever, there is a slight cheat involved. The pen needs to be used with paper which contains barely-visible microdots, which help it track the movement of the pen across the paper.
Of course, that means buying special notebooks, which do carry a price premium over standard ones. But they are not crazily priced compared to regular ones of equal quality, and there are third-party ones available too – including Moleskin. Finally, if you really object to paying for them, or want to create something customized to your own needs, Livescribe provides free templates which let you print your own microdot paper in various formats.
Look and feel
The pen looks pretty ordinary. It’s black metal, with a gunmetal grey cap, and I don’t think anyone would look twice at it unless they happened to recognize the brand name.
It’s also surprisingly light, at 27 grams, which doesn’t feel notably different to the Apple Pencil 2’s 21 grams.
In the hand, it feels … like a pen.
In use
There is definitely something quite spooky or magical about seeing live replication on an iPhone or iPad of whatever someone is writing or drawing in a basically ordinary notepad! Here’s a quick video:
And here’s what Steph has to say about the feel when writing:
And the overall experience:
I really like the Livescribe notebooks – they feel like quality items, like premium bound notebooks I’ve bought in the past.
OCR performance is impressive, with just the occasional glitch.
Livescribe Symphony price & conclusions
The Livescribe Symphony costs $110. Notebooks cost from around $6.25 each when bought in multipacks.
Here are Steph’s conclusions:
The pricing of the pen is fair for what it is, and I’d often spend more on a traditional notebook, so all in, it strikes me as good value for money.