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Stuff / News / The TCL Note A1 Nxtpaper is coming for the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft

The TCL Note A1 Nxtpaper is coming for the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft

TCL's Nxtpaper tech offers a paper-like surface without an e-ink display and the latest device promises to give Amazon's reader a run for its money

TCL-Note-A1-Nxtpaper

TCL is bringing a new version of its NXTPAPER technology to a new reader-like device that might provide a rival to Amazon’s Kindle Scribe Colorsoft device.

The TCL Note A1 NXTPAPER is an LCD-based display – rather than e-ink – and promises an 11.5-inch full colour (16.7 million) panel that has a 2,200 x 1,440 resolution and 120Hz refresh rate. So not all that different from what you’ve come to expect from a tablet.

The NXTPAPER Pure display promises harmful blue light is reduced to just 2.44% with TÜV-certified eye comfort. It also supports TCL’s T-Pen Pro for note-taking (with natural handwriting) and sketching. TCL says the accessory offers 8,192 levels of pressure sensitivity, while the latency is below 5 milliseconds. There’s also the option of a smart keyboard case for typed inputs.

There’s a fingerprint sensor to keep your handwritten notes safe and secure, and eight microphones dotted around the device for dictation. Among the device’s AI tools are real time transcription and translation. Furthermore, it’ll beautify your handwriting (whatever that means, your handwriting is beautiful as it is!), convert handwriting to text, and provide AI summarisation and ban-worthy writing assist tools.

The device has 256GB of storage, weighs 500g and is just 5.5mm thin. It promises broad file support and easy wireless transfers between devices. The 8,000mAh battery promises “days of power” too.

“TCL Note A1 NXTPAPER lets you think, write, and create as naturally as on paper, but with the intelligence and freedom of modern technology,” said Daniel Sun, chief technology officer at TCL Industries. “It’s a powerful tool for clarity, creativity, and connection, with AI enhancements for professionals, freelancers, students, and scholars.” 

It’s going to be out in February 2026 and it’ll cost $549 in the United States, beginning with availability via Kickstarter.

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I'm a freelance writer based in South Florida and has bylines for Trusted Reviews Wareable, Wired UK, Shortlist, Pellicle and DigitalSpy, FourFourTwo, The Observer, Empire Online, TechRadar and T3. I have authored more than 10 books on how to use technology for Flametree Publishing. I'm a podcast host for The Liverpool Way and teach yoga in my spare time.