

I’ve been using Fedora GNOME on a Lenovo Ideapad Duet 3i for awhile. It’s one of those Surface-alikes, it’s electrically an x86 laptop with a wacom touch screen and the keyboard is on a floppy rubber flap hinge that can magnetically detach to give you a tablet.
Gnome itself is better than un-fucking-usable. It doesn’t really make any intuitive sense, because Gnome is developed by Species 8472. There’s a gesture to open the onscreen keyboard. Because Gnome is designed primarily for use with the keyboard, they figure you need constant access to it even if there’s no text field available on the screen. Because you’re definitely pressing Ctrl+Alt+Meta+Alt-Gr+Shift+Super+T to launch the web browser or whatever makes sense in Fluidic Space on a touch keyboard. It’s a similar gesture to the one for opening the app drawer.
All onscreen keyboards available in Linux are quarter-baked. They barely function to enter text. They’re so poorly featured they’re more of a burden than waiting until you’re back at your desk.
There are no apps in the Linux ecosystem designed for tablet use. Nothing is touch-screen friendly and it never will be. Even the wacom tablet…
So here’s another issue, the little laptop I have has a wacom tablet feature so it’s stylus compatible. Badly. Part of the issue is it’s a weird, low-volume computer. Part of the issue is it’s a 1080x1920 resolution display. Yeah, it’s native portrait mode. Everything in Linux seems to assume a native landscape mode. So you can feel the little fuckist having an argument with itself. “You mean 1920x1080.” “No, I mean 1080x1920.” So you’ll get bizarre things like the touch screen or digitizer being rotated 90 degrees from what the display is showing. Getting second or third buttons on a stylus working is a lol no, pressure sensitivity comes and goes…we’re in the land of “we made whatever the fuck we wanted to this week and we’ll give Microsoft a special shim to make it work in Windows.” and Linux never gets the equivalent of that shim, so it’ll never work right.
Back to the apps, everything is tiny and assumes you have a three button mouse and full QWERTY keyboard. Reading a PDF document sucks on a Fedora Gnome tablet. Zooming in and out and scrolling around just…sucks. Because it’s not a touch screen app reading touch inputs, it’s a desktop app reading mouse inputs that were translated from touch inputs by a zoomer freshman equipped with “Jeff Foxworthy’s touch interface to mouse interface phrasebook v0.0.6”.














Copyright and patent are a compromise.
Society is iterative. Every work of art or technology is significantly based on prior work. So if you go to the extremes, where “I intented it, it is mine forever and passed to my children” society stalls as technoligarchs never license their patents. If you go full blyatski and outlaw personal ownership, you get Soviet Russia, a nation whose contribution to global culture has been a few ballets, some long depressing books and precisely one video game, because nobody is given incentive or even opportunity to create anything, so they don’t.
Give us a full copy of your work, enough information to make a full copy of it. This will be held in trust by the government. We will give you full, exclusive right to monetize your invention for a couple decades, and the copy stored with the government is the stake in your claim, the proof you need to win your lawsuit. After those couple decades are over, the idea becomes public property. Our inventors get to make a living, society gets to progress.
Copyright has gone cancerous, with terms lengthened far beyond a human lifetime to benefit major corporations and not individual creators. We need to fix that.