TCL NXTPAPER 11 Plus features a glare-free NXTPAPER 4.0 display by Brad Linder (liliputing.com)

The TCL NXTPAPER 11 Plus is a tablet with an 11.5 inch display featuring a 120 Hz refresh rate and up to 550 nits brightness. It’s also the first tablet to feature TCL’s NXTPAPER 4.0 display technology, which the company says offers a more paper-like viewing experience than ever thanks to hardware and software improvements. NXTPAPER […]

The screen on the TCL NXTPAPER tablets is intriguing to me. [See Liliputing report] Intriguing enough for me to spend $200 on an Android tablet by a Chinese TV manufacturer that “is also baking … AI features into the tablet”? No. I do not even let my 2019 TCL TV talk to the internet, much less a tablet which would depend on updates. (This more or less also summarizes my thoughts on the BOOX line of e-ink devices.) But it would be neat to have this sort of screen on a Linux-friendly device (or even LineageOS-friendly if the project ever adds some of the NXTPAPER tablets to its list of supported devices). I suppose I would consider a cheap one if I could get some of the Google/AI cruft off the homescreen and use it as an e-reader without turning on wi-fi. For now, I will stick with my Pocketbooks for my e-reader needs (my Kindle Paperwhite does make a few rare appearances.)

Kawaii Typo by Nicholas A. Ferrell
I sometimes use the search box on The New Leaf Journal (despite its limitations) to find one of my old articles. I tried to run a search for teracube, which refers to my old phone (I reviewed it back in 2021). However, the search failed. Why did it fail? Because I typed teracute. Search results page...

Yesterday I posted about making a typo when I used The New Leaf Journal’s on-site search to look for something I wrote about my now-old Teracube 2e phone. Once I corrected my typo, I found what I was looking for: A short leaflet about upgrading my phone via ADB. I wanted to find it not because I was trying to upgrade my Murena Teracube 2e (it upgrades normally these days), but instead because I was trying to update another device that I once dicussed in The New Leaf Journal, my LineageOS-powered Google Nexus 7 Wi-Fi (2013) tablet. The tablet is no longer officially supported by LineageOS, but I found a build from a developer who decided to keep maintaining his own version. While I did figure out how to upgrade, the new ROM did not fit my use-case. One thing led to another, and my Nexus 7 tablet has seen an unexpected revival.

DivestOS updater screen on Google Nexus 7 Wi-Fi (2013) tablet.

Out: LineageOS. In: DivestOS. That is all I will say here, but you can expect a new article about an old tablet in The New Leaf Journal in the not-too-distant future.