reMarkable is making its paper tablet a little less “island mode.” Starting with reMarkable OS 3.26, the company is rolling out a new “Send to Miro” feature that lets users push handwritten notes and sketches straight from a reMarkable device into Miro’s online canvas, where Miro’s AI converts them into editable text, sticky notes, and diagrams.
The pitch is simple: keep the part people actually like (scribbling ideas on a distraction-free slab of e-ink) and automate the annoying part (retyping, screenshotting, and rebuilding a sketch in a team tool). For Connect subscribers, it’s essentially a one-tap bridge between solo ideation and collaborative work.
Once a page is sent over, Miro does the heavy lifting by translating handwriting into digital objects teammates can reorganize, comment on, and build into docs or workflows. It’s the kind of integration that’s become table stakes for modern “work OS” platforms, but it’s still meaningful for reMarkable because it nudges the device from a personal notebook toward a legitimate node in a team’s toolchain.
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What’s actually launching
“Send to Miro” is scheduled to roll out alongside reMarkable OS 3.26 beginning March 18. It’s aimed at people who start on paper (or as close to paper as you can get) and need to end up in a shared workspace without the usual friction. reMarkable says the feature will be available for Connect subscribers, which is its paid subscription tier.
Why this matters
Consumer tech has spent the last decade trying to make note-taking “smarter,” often by stuffing in features that get in the way of actually writing. reMarkable’s approach here is more pragmatic: don’t replace the act of thinking on a blank page, just make the output easier to reuse.
For Miro, it’s another distribution play that pulls more inputs into its canvas and keeps teams inside its workflow longer. For reMarkable, partnerships like this are a bet that the paper tablet category grows by becoming a companion to mainstream productivity apps — not a rebellion against them.
reMarkable is an Oslo-based company best known for its minimalist e-ink paper tablets, while Miro positions itself as an AI-powered collaboration workspace used by teams to plan and build projects.

