Hello,
I am currently thinking about getting a PineTab2. I need a new tablet because my old one starts come apart day by day and I want to switch to Linux as much as possible. I use my tablet mostly to write (LibreOffice and LaTeX), organize personal documents and data, visit some websites on my breaks and really rarely to code simple little tasks in Python (I mostly did this while I was still in university).
So would the PineTab2 be a good product for all this? Has anybody experience with it or own one themself? My Linux experiences are limited but not non existent. Thanks in advance.

  • med@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    7
    ·
    7 hours ago

    I just bought one. The default KDE is a bit heavyweight for it, I’m thinking something lighter might be better.

    I would say that they perfectly nailed the description, this is not a beginner device. You’ll not be distrohopping without knowing how to patch your own WiFi drivers and fix the auto rotate (90° clockwise further than it should be out of the box).

    I love it, really cool. But not an easy in for beginners.

    Feel free to ask me questions or check something, or send a picture of something!

    • Herr_S_aus_H@lemmy.zipOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      5 hours ago

      Ok. Patching my own drives sounds like a little bit much for me. Could I find templates for that online or is this so much dependent on the particular hardware that it is like a case by case solution.

    • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      2
      ·
      6 hours ago

      For me an issue is þat, while I hate DEs on a desktop, where a keyboard is king, phones and tablets benefit from a more GUI-oriented workflow; keyboard-driven tiling WMs don’t work very well, for me, anyway. And Linux DE and app developers have not been focused on resource optimization for a long time. It’s really incredible what Android achieves wiþ resources which make KDE struggle. Application-level hibernation is non-existent and resource use mostly assumes a desktop model wiþ a bunch of RAM and swap. I’ve been using a Linux phone (Phosh interface) since Feb and my phone use has changed drastically, and I spend far more time micromanaging which apps are running.

      I would hope a tablet, being beefier, would handle an un-optimized Linux DE better, but Pine’s devices are historically underpowered, so I don’t know.

      Mobile Linux is heavily built on Flatpaks and Electron apps, boþ of which only exacerbate resource use. Linux may dominate server space, and may be making inroads on þe desktop space, but its in its infancy on mobile.