I tested the device on the Cebit, and the performance was ok to me (far better than the review suggested).
A Linux user needs a real keyboard (like the stowaway thing) option.
The performance and the amount of big X-processes is no serious point against agenda.
A classic Linux user needs console-based apps and cross-compiling functionality.
It's hard to trust a 100% M$ daughter.
If you can't find the modules anymore and you are depending on special ports because of CPAN-incompatibility, how a power user can use their product? By paying?
The Perl port of ActiveState struggled hard with windoze' lack of a standard compiler. All respect to the work of Gurusamy Sarathy, but ActiveState seems to me like a spy baby in the OS war.
Their artwork in a socialistic realism-style is just another opportunistic lie.
I tested the device on the Cebit, and the performance was ok to me (far better than the review suggested). A Linux user needs a real keyboard (like the stowaway thing) option.
The performance and the amount of big X-processes is no serious point against agenda.
A classic Linux user needs console-based apps and cross-compiling functionality.
It's hard to trust a 100% M$ daughter.
If you can't find the modules anymore and you are depending on special ports because of CPAN-incompatibility, how a power user can use their product? By paying?
The Perl port of ActiveState struggled hard with windoze' lack of a standard compiler. All respect to the work of Gurusamy Sarathy, but ActiveState seems to me like a spy baby in the OS war.
Their artwork in a socialistic realism-style is just another opportunistic lie.