 Hello today, I'm here to review this little beauty and I'm going to talk about the hardware, the software and then a little bit of comments about what being open source actually means. So number one, the hardware. Now the JinkPad actually comes in four pieces. The first one, which I'm going to talk right away, is the pen. How is the pen? I don't really know and that's because it broke day one, which is really sad. I don't know how much of it is my fault. I don't think it took any heat or drop. And I've also seen other people pointing out that their pen broke. So I think the pen is a bit fragile. I've used it one time and I found it to be more similar to Apple Pencil rather than Samsung Pen. However, it wasn't quite there in terms of quality. Again, it was just one day and then it went away. The part number two, which I don't have here with me right now, is a cover without the keyboard, which is made of pig leather. And that one is really good. And it also has a way to like a little space for the pen that attaches magnetically, just like the JinkPad and also a little JinkPad logo, which is very nice to see. I don't know what you should expect out of it, except that it feels nice and it surely does that. There is the other cover, which is this one here. How is it? Super nice in the hand. It's a bit heavy. My girlfriend thinks that it's too heavy, but I think it's just fine. You might disagree with me, so you're warned. It's extremely well built. However, it also has a couple of flows. I'm going to point out, sorry, the major flows in my opinion. And those are number one, the fact that on the back you don't have rubber bands on both sides, which means that the one that hasn't will very easily deteriorate and get scratches. Even if you always use the JinkPad with the keys open, it still scratches while it's closed down. So you need to be extra careful when you're bringing it around. Also, the rubber bands, the existing ones do come off a bit easily. I managed to get mine back as easily as it came off, but that shouldn't have happened after like a couple of days. Also, maybe the hinge is not very sturdy. You can see the laptop if you touch it goes a bit on and on. But except that, and I do think that those are not major issues. The keyboard is fine. You can actually type pretty fast on it. I managed to get 90 words per minute. And if you're not able to reach that, well, it's because of you. The touchpad is a bit small, but it feels fine. And that honestly wasn't. So let's talk about the device. It feels amazing, like volume buttons in the right position, a fingerprint reader to actually lock in in the right position. The fingerprint reader doesn't actually work. Good camera for what you would expect from a 2000 USD tablet. This is not that price. The camera is under running. Do not have such things. I can understand that. It's not very fast without it, but it's not a deal breaker. The YouTube videos feel like a bit and the whole user interface one feels snappy. I don't think that's a bottleneck. This is references board one, board two, and board three. And he has to keep track of all that in his... As far as RAM goes, storage, I also think those are very much not issues. Of course, you need to know what you're going to do with this. If you think that you'll be able to do any sort of hardware work, like I don't know, video editing or picture editing with GIMP, if it's a large image, give up. Like don't do that. That won't happen. Not on this device, but if you're buying this device to, I don't know, take news, school war, that sort of stuff, which is very much my use case, those are not issues. But there are others. Let's talk about the software. Because as I see it currently, I think all of the issues of the GIMP ad are software related. Bad reviews saying, yes, the software is kind of bad. You don't have X, you don't have... I can see the effort that you're putting in. If you take something much fine, but if the end result breaks something that was there before from the project that you forked originally, what are you doing? Like you're moving backwards and make you a very easy example. So keyboard layout. So as you know, this GIMP ad is a keyboard. And in all devices, you can change the keyboard layout, especially if you're planning on selling. It's not just that. I'll make you another stupid example. Take the touchpad. Okay, you can take the touchpad. And usually, if you need to drag a folder from somewhere to somewhere else, you don't just do this on the touchpad. Like click, click. Usually, long click. And then with the other finger, you drag around the folder because maybe the touchpad is not long enough. It's broken. It doesn't work. You cannot actually drag and drop or, I don't know, just select text using two fingers. And that's a massive fear breaker. But how are you going to select more than two lines of text with it? If you need to select a paragraph, which is such a basic use case, it's broken. You can't do that. And it baffles me. Like it was working. It should work on any computer. And you actively do something that broke it. Or another example, screen rotation. Okay, screen rotation is not supported. Okay, computer, which is the yoga and is also a touch screen. But on the chippad, it doesn't work. And it actually like hours to get. Okay, another example, screen resolution. Okay, screen resolution is hard. I'll say that, by the way. It's hard to make all the apps use a scaling factor. However, the apps that are there by default, okay, the open up factor. But you can install any third party app, scale factor, which is way too small. Of course, there are ways to fix that and to like system flags variables, so sorry, to actually change the scaling, the QT scaling. But what are you doing? You are indeed changing the scaling factor, but only for your own apps? How are you, how are you even doing that? And why? Like what's the reason behind it? It's, it sounds like it would be easier to just use the QT scaling factor has its currently implemented. If you have a tablet and you can install the third party absolute, you shouldn't rely on the user actually fixing the resolution by themselves. Take proper things. Okay, Jingpad is based heavily on Kurogami and QMount. That's fine because Kurogami is a product of ours, which is KDE, and it supports theming. So that's very nice. Jingpad allows you to have a light and dark theme, which is nice. But another, you need to reboot the device. Why? Okay, we demented first games and it was working when we gave it to you. And you broke it like applications shouldn't need a system restart for the color scheme to actually take effect. It's so many of these small things that it's not like, okay, we need to work on that. Yes, but they were working. You didn't have to break them in the first place. I think that new system is not that it doesn't work on. And then there is open source. Okay, so if you're playing, if you are doing so, what I expect is that everything that ships on that device is significant part of it because, let me say that actually a big deal for this device, if you have such, if they open source the open system, however, Jingpad doesn't have a record of actually respecting GPL license very well. And let me explain that. As you know, if you fork someone's code and if it's under GPL, you are like, you need to release the source code when you actually ship the device or release your operating system. That's like legally required. Do you remember like Trump? Okay, this video is going to get demonetized. Never mind. Do you remember that guy's social network? It was using Mastodont. And because they screwed up and actually accidentally said that it was based on Mastodont, Mastodont went up and said, okay, no, you have to release the source code of this, which they weren't. Jingpad is based on many KD Plasma or KD products, and they modified them. And in theory, they should release what modification they've made. And they do months and months later, which doesn't look good at all because you can't just say like, we are open source, and then you check and you discover that they're violating the license. And you ask, what's up with that? And they answer, oh, yes, sure, we don't have the time to fix that, but we will eventually open source everything just in the past six months. Okay, okay, they did, they did. They actually outsourced the latest version of the Jingpad of the Jingguas. But as soon as another version rolls out, how many months are we going to have to wait to have a new modification? Now, to be kind of in source, I think, it's better than not be open source is not that it is working on this. And honestly, I understand what open source is. That's not as possible, because it's easy for new companies, not fully possible. So people are trying to understand, making good questions, and that's why it is. However, I have to tell you, in this moment, they still have to work on this. Hardware, I think I would pay that price by this. The software is okay. I don't want to mash it too much. It's a good start, they broke things that were working, but hopefully as soon as they fix them, I'll be happier. But I would be even happier if I could install any operating system on that. Is this useful? Should you buy it? If you care about open source, it might be an option. However, if you need a tablet to actually do work, this is the tip. If you need a tablet to do work and to fight with it, manage to please them. Hopefully reviews are better. Had like a voiceover, over like nice images. So I think the video cuts here.