Elisabeth

7fz · Your reMarkable can do more. - Calendars, news, books and more delivered to your reMarkable

by
7fz turns your reMarkable into a quiet morning paper. Each day a personalised PDF lands in your cloud folder: your calendars, your RSS feeds, news of the day, and original serialised content like our interactive case files. No app, no notifications, no glowing screen. Just the handful of things you actually chose, ready for e-ink. Made for the people who bought a reMarkable to escape distractions and want a daily reason to pick it up.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Elisabeth
Maker
📌
Hey Product Hunt, I’m Elisabeth, the solo founder behind 7fz. I built 7fz because I wanted my reMarkable to feel less like an isolated notebook and more like a useful daily paper. I wanted calendars, news, weather, books, and small tools on it without hacks, OS version lottery, or fragile setup guides. The core workflow is simple: connect your reMarkable, add a private iCal link, and get a usable linked calendar PDF on the device. And yes, it can even read handwritten Tic Tac Toe moves directly from .rm files and play back. Today 7fz generates linked calendar PDFs that survive updates without erasing your handwritten notes, shows note-indicator dots in overview pages, and delivers news, weather, books, and documents on a schedule. There are also small paper-native extras built in: Sudoku, crosswords, mazes, coloring pages, chess puzzles, and the slightly absurd Tic Tac Toe mode. I also added Google Drive support and manual downloads, so people can use 7fz without pairing their reMarkable cloud account if they prefer. Trust note: 7fz is built by one person, with no third-party audit yet. Passwords are bcrypt hashed, device tokens are AES-256 encrypted at rest, and payments go through Paddle. I would rather say this out loud than tuck it in a footer. I use 7fz every day on my own reMarkable. Next up, I’m improving calendar layouts, adding more paper-native tools, and making the non-reMarkable workflows smoother for people using Google Drive or manual downloads. I’d love feedback from people who use e-ink devices as part of their real daily workflow.