 Is there such thing as an official KD laptop? Well, not quite, but we're actually pretty close to that. So if you go to KD.org and you go to buy a device with Plasma, you do get a list of devices running KD Plasma, starting obviously with the Steam Deck, because I mean it's such a cool device, isn't it? But of course the Steam Deck is not made by KD and unlikely no laptop or devices made by KD. I would love to see some part of the community of KD actually make some hardware, like official KD hardware made by KD community itself. That would be super cool, but of course that's pretty hard. I tried to find some people to start such community. I haven't managed yet, but we get close nonetheless. So KD does have ties with hardware manufacturers, which do Linux devices. And Pine is a really good example. But one that seemed even closer to KD is the KD Slimbook, which actually has the KD log on it. And it's called the KD Slimbook. So it has KD in the name. And this comes out of a pretty close relationship with Slimbook and KD. Pine also has a KD edition for many of their devices, starting with the Pine phone obviously, but also the first Pine book is shaped with a KDE Neon, sorry, by default out of the box. There's also fewer people know about this one, the Kubuntu Focus. And I should talk about this specifically because it's an interesting project. It is a company, a hardware manufacturer company that actually contacted Kubuntu to do an official Kubuntu laptop. And you might say, okay, but Kubuntu is not part of KDE. So it's not a KDE laptop. And the fact is that Kubuntu is part of KDE. And where shouldn't they be? They are actually involved in the KDE community. They are part of it. And if they, if you go and ask the Kubuntu developers, do you think you're part of the KDE community, they say yes. So they are. So Kubuntu is the Kubuntu Focus, sorry, is probably a laptop that's somewhat a KDE laptop because it's a Kubuntu laptop and Kubuntu is part of the KDE community. Now there are other smaller projects. As an example, KDE does have a good relationship with Shells. And that's not technically any device, but you can run KDE on your browser. Also Star Labs, Tuxedo, I do have a starlight here in the picture. So I'm going to tell you how it actually runs. But the most important ones are the KDE Slimbook, the Pine phone and Pinebook and the Kubuntu Focus M2. The Slimbook comes with a Ryzen, which is pretty interesting. Most of the laptops I see around are usually Intel's. And even from the webpage, you can really feel that it's very much a KDE product. Even the webpage, even though it's not like KDE.org, but it's part of the Slimbook website is styled just as a KDE website and has the KDE logo. And all of the style is the KDE style. Even the tabs here on the bottom are recreation of the actual tabs that you do see in the Task Manager of KDE Plasma. They use the KDE Plasma style breeze by default. So it really feels like this is a KDE product. Of course, this comes with KDE Plasma pre-installed, I think you guessed. Another very, very important point about the KDE Slimbook sees that Slimbook has actually been very active in refreshing the line. And this is actually the third edition of the Slimbooks. It's not quite every year. Some years have been skipped, but it's pretty regular. So we might see a new Slimbook refresh every one, two years in the future. So that's very good for how the future is looking for KDE hardware. The Kubuntu one is also adds it a second edition. It says Gen 4 here. Could be that I missed a couple, but as far as I know, this was the second product. This is very, very high spec and of course, very, very, very hard to price. I don't think I'll ever be able to actually see one of this slide, but if you need a kind of work that's very high-end, you might be interested in this kind of project. However, when I see this kind of laptops, I always think that if we want something with Linux and the KDE logo on it to reach a weather public, maybe it could be easier or it would make more sense to actually do laptops that are slightly more lower end and that people can buy more easily because if you're planning to buy to spend like two grants on a laptop, you'll probably want something so specced up that you know what kind of companies provide the best value for price. And even if you buy a super specced Linux, sorry, Dell XPS super high spec, you can probably, you probably have the knowledge to then put Linux on it if you know, if you like Linux and you know that you're going to spend that much. So for the everyday users, probably something cheaper is an easier way to actually reach the public. So I'm not completely sold on this particular concept. It's also the laptop that I've seen less news of that I've seen less shared around. So that could be related to the fact that it's two grants. That's a lot. Thirdly, the Pine in general is probably the company that I know the best in terms of products. I actually own three different Pine products. The first one that I got is the first Pine book, which I absolutely love. And fun fact, it also helped me a lot get involved in KDE. When I originally started contributing to KDE, one of the very first things that I did was actually do a goal proposal. And if you don't know what goals are, check out my recent videos. You'll find out something very cool today. And I actually wrote the entirety of that goal on the Pine book. And then I forgot about it for a while. I brought it back some months ago and I used it for the computer to actually bring to university to study because my main one hadn't enough battery. And even though it was a $99, actually $89 device, it was amazing, like not of course better than something that costs a lot more. But for the price, I was blown away. So I really, really like that hardware. The Pine phone and the Pine phone pro, I own both of them are super interesting devices that I haven't been able to use as much as I wanted. And that's actually on me completely. I do plan to take the Pine phone pro and actually daily use it for a while. And the good thing about this is that Plasma Shell is actually getting really good. And there's also the whole side of wedroid integration that I tried out and it works really well. So we could be getting really close to something that's actually daily usable. And I gotta say that actually owning the Pine phone with the KDE logo on it, having a phone with the KDE logo on it, it feels so cool. So this is a general overview of the hardware that actually has the KDE logo or name on it or the Kubuntu logo, which is part of the KDE brand. So which one of this would you actually buy or would you actually be interested in like a KDE laptop done by the KDE community? Because even though it sounds cool, actually having hardware manufacturers that know very well how to do this and then having very good relationship with them seem to be working super well. So I don't know.