 Okay, I've had my ping pod for two or three days now. Just turned it on. Once again, the first little section of the boot process, when you're booting into Linux, there's no splashing, so it's sometimes hard to tell whether you have it on or off. And in my last video, I was showing the default Linux distro that comes on the SD card. I think it's called Linaro, is the distro, which is an Ubuntu base, which is based on Debian distro. And it worked, it locked up on me in that video, or at least it seemed to have not had that issue in the last couple of days, so hopefully that doesn't happen again. But the interface was not the best for touchscreens. So I decided to look into options for touchscreen-based distros that are designed for tablets. And one that came up was Bud High, I think it's how to say that, B-O-D-H-I. They use the Enlightenment desktop, and when you first boot into that, they give you options, they have profiles for different devices, tablets being one of them. So this is that. I did not actually get the Bud High distro on to here, which they do provide an ARM-based distro. They have setups for images for Raspberry Pi, Chromebooks, and Samsung devices. I believe they're working on one for this device. But instead of getting that image and putting it all on here, for right now I decided, since they're both Debian-based, to see if I can just add the repositories and install some packages from the Bud High distribution. So I'll have a tutorial on what I did here coming up soon, and it works fairly well except for one little glitch, but I'll show you that. And so the glitch is sometimes it seems like the touch screen is detecting the mouse movements, but not the mouse clicks. So let me get my OTG cable here and plug this in so that I can plug in an actual mouse. So I'll plug this in like this, and I'll get my mouse here and plug it in. So I'm plugging in an actual mouse, and now you can see me clicking on the menus here. I can scroll over stuff and choose stuff. They also have this big button down here that looks like a leaf right there, which you can click, which brings up a nice little touch screen-friendly menu of all your applications that you can scroll through. And as I said, sometimes, so right there, you can see me scrolling over the menus with my finger, and I can choose something to open. So let's go up to applications, accessories, actually I'm under preferences, accessories, and we'll open up the file manager. So right now, touching it with my finger seems to be working. Let me try going into a folder here. So you see it right there, I'm not sure if this is, I think this should be set up for single click, but you can see it kind of is acting like mouse over, and I'll give you a better example of that. Let me go also, one of the reasons I went with this interface is they have a very nice keyboard. If I can get it to come up here, oh, clicking the wrong icon, there we go. So very nice keyboard with different settings, so it basically has every keys, all the keys you would need for working in a terminal, and different little themes for it just by clicking on that button up there. So once I get past this little touch screen issue, this should work very nice. Let me go to my home screen here by clicking this little house. It looks like an arrow, but that's a house, I believe, for home. And let me choose something like GCalc should be in here somewhere, it was working at the other day, because that's a good example, oh, right there. So here's the calculator application, and hopefully you can see this in the video. As I move the mouse over, you can see the buttons highlighting, and then I can click on one, and you can see when I click it, it gets darker. Now, right now the touch screen is working properly. You can see me typing numbers, I can say, plus this. So it's hit and miss. I'm really not sure what the issue is. Once again, I can go here to the menu. Okay, so now it's happening. If you can see the icon menu up here, you can tell that the mouse is over, and if I try clicking on stuff, no longer can I click on the buttons. But you can see that it's detecting where I'm putting my finger, because it's highlighting those buttons. So it seems to be an issue with knowing where the mouse is, but not recognizing my touches as clicks. And I've tried double-clicking, yeah, that doesn't work. And as you saw a second ago, it was working. So that's really my only problem. Once I figure out a solution to that, I will be doing a tutorial on getting this all set up, because this is a much nicer interface than the default one on the ping pod. So hopefully the developers of the ping pod go in a direction like this, much better than the keyboard on the other one, the little keyboard that they have here provided. It's much more like you would see an Android or iPhone device, a nice touch screen on screen keyboard. So that's it. That's a quick look at this. Once again, this is just using the Enlightment desktop interface with some profiles made by the Bud High distro. And I really hope to have a lot more on this if I can figure out this touch screen issue. And I actually think that might have been the issue I was having the other day when I thought the device had locked up on me, because I was trying to click on stuff and it didn't seem to be clicking on stuff. So definitely going to try to figure this out and I'll have more updates on that. Very happy. Once I figure it get past this little touch screen issue, I think I'll be very happy with this device. I'll also be doing tutorials on making your browser so that you can drag with your finger rather than having to reach over the scroll bar there. So keep on watching my series on this pen pod device.