Nothing is giving Essential Space a useful upgrade that should make the feature easier to live with day to day. The latest update adds better sharing options for recordings and memories, including PDF export support for transcripts and saved content. The rollout is already going out through the Play Store.
For users, the biggest change is simple: Essential Space is no longer just a place to store notes and recordings. Nothing now lets you share “Flip to Record” audio clips, and the transcript can be exported as text, a PDF, an image, or Markdown. That gives the feature a much cleaner path for sharing work notes, meeting summaries, and quick voice captures.
The update also expands export options for “Memories,” which are the images or screenshots saved inside Essential Space. These can now be shared as images, PDFs, or Markdown files using the same menu flow. That makes the tool more practical for people who want to move content out of Essential Space and into other apps or workflows.
This matters because export flexibility is one of the small details that decides whether a productivity feature feels useful or annoying. A clean PDF export option makes it easier to archive information, share it with others, or keep a readable copy without extra formatting work.
Nothing says the feature is rolling out now, and the update is reaching Nothing Phone (3), Phone (3a), and Phone (3a) Pro users. The company’s changelog-style description also makes it clear that the goal is to let users export Essential Space content as images, PDFs, or Markdown with minimal friction.

That is a smart move. Essential Space is one of Nothing’s more interesting software features, but it only becomes genuinely useful when sharing and export are easy. PDF support is the kind of improvement that does not sound flashy, but it can make the feature far more practical for everyday use.
In short, Nothing’s latest Essential Space update fixes one of the most common productivity pain points: getting content out in a format that actually works. With PDF export now part of the mix, Essential Space looks a little less experimental and a little more ready for real-world use.















