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Robleft a comment
Oh, and it works on tablet and mobile too.

A tiny drawing studio for your Kindle.Make pixel art, sketch ideas, or explore one-bit constraints
1BitKindle turns the e-ink screen’s limitations into texture: dithering, halftones, grain, and patterns designed to feel good under your pen. Make pixel art, sketch ideas, or explore the beauty of one-bit constraints.

A tiny drawing studio for your Kindle.Make pixel art, sketch ideas, or explore one-bit constraints
Robleft a comment
Hey everyone — Rob here 👋 I built 1BitKindle because the Kindle Scribe’s native drawing tools don’t support multiple shades or values, and I wanted something that let me work with more nuance on e-ink. So I made a tiny pixel-art studio with variable brush sizes, custom dithering, halftones, and clean export via QR code. You can use it directly on your Kindle Scribe by opening: More → Web...

A tiny drawing studio for your Kindle.Make pixel art, sketch ideas, or explore one-bit constraints
Robleft a comment
I built this because I kept ending up with lots of Markdown files—from ChatGPT, Slack Canvas, notes, and my own thinking—but no pleasant way to read or edit them. I tried VS Code, Typora, and iA Writer. They’re powerful, but they assume you already remember Markdown. I wanted a writing tool that stayed out of my way and worked more like tools people already know—using / commands like Notion or...
Markdown for the Rest of UsWrite in Markdown without thinking in Markdown
Markdown for the Rest of Us is a beautiful, offline-first Markdown editor that replaces syntax memorization with familiar slash commands.
Inspired by tools like Notion and Slack Canvas, it lets you write naturally while still producing clean, portable Markdown.
It supports local files, works offline, installs as an app, includes optional readability insights, and exports directly to HTML—so your notes can become real pages without extra tooling.
Markdown for the Rest of UsWrite in Markdown without thinking in Markdown
