 Hello, bonjour. I want to show you here a new laptop I have that can do digital painting on Linux on the go and this on the display directly. So not like connecting a tablet to a laptop but using directly the display. And I will open it right now. And just to show you I run the system Fedora Linux on KDE Plasma and this is the 38 version and it runs very well. You can also convert this laptop into a tablet and it's a display tablet where with touch and where you can draw on it and the unit is still very thin in my opinion because compared to a real tablet I understand it's a little bit thick and there is something that I like it's the keyboard that remain locked so all the key are flat and you can't accidentally press on them in this type of position. About the position I find it not comfortable to draw or paint on the table flat like that. So I usually take my pencil case it's something that I have on my bag usually when I travel and I just put it behind the display like that. It's stable and it absorbs all the little shock of finger or stylus. This is very comfortable. About the stylus this one use the Wacom AES technology and it's active electrostatic technology and you can see it tracks pretty well my movement. This stylus is the Wacom bamboo ink plus and it's a stylus with a battery it's one you can charge with a USB-C. So let's start Krita so I can show you some little palm rejection and pinch zoom and also rotation. It works sort of well. You can see the button also works well. Let's start a digital painting project and I will continue to speak about this device while painting and sometime I will accelerate some part but I will keep the the first part into real-time speed. You will find some boobling it's not the glass of the device that boobled it's just the autofocus of my camera and I don't know maybe some compression artifact of the video that make the the screen boobled a little bit near to the color selector. It's a glass it's a very solid and it's it's really hard to deform it with the pressure of the nib. So I just see that I forgot to speak about the name of the device. It's a Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 370 and it's a device that is not new. You can't buy it new now. It's five years old. It comes in 2017 and I put it on a second-hand market so I put it for cheap 359 euro and it still has a very good battery. The case of the computer is well done. You can unscrew and replace the battery. I put this tablet with my own money so it's not a sponsored video or hardware by Lenovo or for the Stilis by Wacom. It was like 80 euro as far as I remember but you can see that the total budget for a computer like that where you can just draw everywhere using the the battery and directly on the on the screen this is a very good deal. But of course you can't find it new so you have to hunt for this type of device really carefully. I made a big research to find this type of device and this is not the first one I test. I put two other devices and the first one was a Surface Pro 3 from Microsoft and this one was almost good but the Stilis had a lot of lag and I tried many Stilis and I spent a lot of money to try to to make it work but it has some terrible hardware problem like too many pixels on the screen so the the performance were always bad. It was hard to connect to a projector. It was also not easy to repair. You couldn't open it and in comparison this tiny Lenovo here you can just unscrew and just replace the battery without having some glue on the way or something like that and the other one was I think it was a Samsung one of their Windows compatible tablet and this one had a terrible Linux support so it had no audio and there wasn't a lot of plug also on the device so I had like a single USB-C and I had always to have some adapter also the screen resolution was was weird. I mean the ratio for painting when you connect your device to a projector was wrong and you couldn't paint with a projector and this was very very important for for my usage because I want to use this type of device for demo when I'm not at home or when I do some some live performances like connecting this to a projector and and painting virtually on the building. On my research I was really lucky to find the review of Mobile Tech Review it's a channel on YouTube and her video was full of explanation about the stylus lag about the repairability of the device and about the color space. Really advice YouTube to watch her video to just find a good device with this type of information color space and stylus lag really really important and for the Linux compatibility I was also lucky to find a page on the Arch Linux Vuki but when I received the device it wasn't a very easy challenge when I started my first Linux distro on it. I couldn't use Wayland for example because I couldn't map properly the stylus or I couldn't also calibrate the color of my device and and this one comes with some blueish and greenish colors. This is unfortunate because the screen is very good once calibrated properly you can really do some color work. So yes I had to use X11 and to research how to get a proper on-screen keyboard because it's not integrated in the KDE Plasma when you are on X11 and you have to use a little external application named on board and I tried to theme it for it to look a little bit recent but this software is really old but it does the job. I also had the issue with Krita because Krita had a lot of issue with the default settings. There is like setting with four finger or three finger that are set by default and I think they are terrible in my opinion because one did some undo another one I don't remember but each time I was putting the palm on the device to just paint I had this accidental trigger and it was like I was drawing a first line and then the next line was erased and I didn't know what happened and I even had no idea this setting were here so I had to dig very far to know why my device react like that why I suddenly have my drawing stroke disappearing in the middle of the drawing. It was really confusing and I had to do a lot of research just to find the little way to just disable this type of default of the touch. There is also another option where you can't paint with the finger and I had to enable this because I wanted to use just the finger just to rotate the canvas or to zoom but the the interface in general is really not adapted to paint without a keyboard. Only doing a transformation is a pain a real big pain just to find the tool option to apply it's so easy when you have a keyboard just to press enter but to just validate a transform just to deselect a selection all this little type of thing that I do on the keyboard oh and the brush size changing the brush size with a little slider on the top it's so difficult because you don't have any visual feedback about the size of your brush. Another problem is with the still uses that exist for the Wacom AES. It's the way the button are wired inside the still uses. I think it's because the device is for businessmen and they wanted the first button to be like a quick eraser so you have on the first button the one that is down to the nib an eraser by default but it's not really just a key that you can switch for something else it's a real eraser it's like flipping the still use and erasing so when you press this button when you hold this button more exactly the device switch to an eraser device and this is not something you can customize easily it was really a bad surprise to see this switch of device on the first button because this is not how tablet works this is not like Sinti Intuos and all the Yuan and all the Gaomon and all the XP and I had tried this is really specific to this type of a laptop and if you have a big usage of the first button of the still use just know this so you will find all this in detail on on the blog post I will probably post it one week after making this video because making this video is already a lot of work I hope you you like it I hope you like it also this digital painting I made that was hard to record but that's all see you later and thank you for all the support for my work for my webcomic thank you very much bye