All posts tagged: Nxtpaper

TCL NXTPAPER 70 Pro: Bringing The Disruptive Feature Aimed at E-Readers

TCL NXTPAPER 70 Pro: Bringing The Disruptive Feature Aimed at E-Readers

TCL’s new NXTPAPER 70 Pro is not trying to compete with traditional Android phones, dominated by chipset wars, camera battles, or unique industrial design. Instead, it delivers a differentiation that is the domain of only TCL: a unique display experience. Built around a huge 6.9-inch FHD+ 120Hz NXTPAPER matte display, the device uses a layered anti-glare optical structure designed to reduce reflections and eye strain while maintaining full-color output. On paper, this phone carries midrange hardware, but of course, the NXTPAPER 70 Pro is purpose-built and an amazing device for user behavior, offering a great alternative to conventional smartphones. Its superpower comes from how the device redefines screen interaction. The latest NXTPAPER technology integrates a mode-switching system—With the flip of the NXTPAPER key, users go from Color Paper to Ink Paper to Max Ink—effectively functioning as three devices in one: a standard Android phone, a reading-first matte-display device, and a distraction-minimized monochrome interface. In the budget Android segment, it sits alongside the Samsung Galaxy A-series and Moto G devices, while challenging their assumption that screen …

I tried to do everything on the TCL NXTPAPER 14, and it turns out it’s really just for readers

I tried to do everything on the TCL NXTPAPER 14, and it turns out it’s really just for readers

Looking for a tablet these days is fairly simple: you find the brightest screen, the fastest chip, the lightest or thinnest chassis for the lowest price and go from there. Or you just get an iPad. The TCL NXTPAPER series, here represented by the largest beast in the crew at 14.3 inches, isn’t aiming to be an iPad killer, but rather a tablet that you can look at for hours without your eyes going wonky. Is it the best tablet you can buy for under $500? No, but maybe it doesn’t have to be, if you’re mostly a reader. First impression is of a gorgeously huge tablet with rounded corners and a thickness that evokes my older iPad Pro 12.9-inch. The display is gorgeous, and it’s fun to put the NXTPAPER display through its three-option paces: Regular mode, Color Paper mode, and the black and white Ink Paper mode. The Color Paper evokes color e-ink displays, with soft, muted colors and an off-white background for books that keeps the eye strain low. It’s definitely my …

Why the TCL NXTPAPER 14 Is One of the Best Tablets for Musicians and Sheet Music Reading

Why the TCL NXTPAPER 14 Is One of the Best Tablets for Musicians and Sheet Music Reading

Musicians are familiar with screens, using digital sheet music, recording apps, and performance tools on tablets. However, most screens aren’t designed for long reading sessions or stage lighting conditions. TCL’s NXTPAPER 14 distinguishes itself with a large, paper-like display and features designed for prolonged use. It provides a reading experience closer to real sheet music than looking at a bright screen, which is particularly important for musicians. The TCL NXTPAPER 14 features a 14.3-inch 2.4K NXTPAPER display. Unlike typical glossy screens, it minimizes glare and filters blue light, offering full-color clarity with a softer, more natural look, similar to paper rather than an LCD. This is especially beneficial for musicians reading sheet music, as stage lights, bright rooms, or outdoor settings can hinder visibility on glossy screens. The NXTPAPER display reduces reflections and ensures notation remains clear even in difficult lighting conditions. It also supports multiple display modes, allowing you to switch into a more paper-like reading view when needed. Combined with the massive screen estate, you can comfortably view full pages of sheet music …

TCL quietly did something clever with its Nxtpaper phone and AMOLED at MWC

TCL quietly did something clever with its Nxtpaper phone and AMOLED at MWC

Kerry Wan/ZDNET Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways TCL has unveiled a Nxtpaper AMOLED concept phone. It promotes more vivid imagery while retaining its eye-comfort elements. Key upgrades include a higher polarization rate and reduced blue light. TCL’s Nxtpaper line of phones and tablets has always been a ‘comfort pick’ for me, as their displays are treated to effectively promote eye care and digital well-being. That’s why the company’s latest upgrade left me flailing my arms around upon discovery. Also: Best of MWC 2026: Live updates on phones, concepts, and robots we’re seeing By building Nxtpaper over AMOLED, TCL says its phones can now achieve more vivid visuals while retaining the level of eye comfort we’ve come to expect. In a warm, naturally-lit room, I picked up a working model and saw the difference myself. Since the beginning, TCL Nxtpaper has been rooted in LCD panels, partly for the ease of light management (to create that natural e-paper appearance) and cost. The downside of LCD backlighting, however, is reduced contrast …