Phosh is used quiet a bit on tablets. E.g. Purism ships it e.g. for their Librem 11 and also Juno uses it. We have a phosh-tablet
for that use case in Debian.
agx
joined 1 week ago
Phosh is used quiet a bit on tablets. E.g. Purism ships it e.g. for their Librem 11 and also Juno uses it. We have a phosh-tablet
for that use case in Debian.
Greeters like phog or phrog are designed to work with touch and packaged in distributions.
No need for a keyboard nowadays (can say so at least for the DE I'm using). You can attach a keyboard though (and often a 2nd (external) display) if you want to turn it (temporarily) into a "desktop".