Half out of curiosity and half out of real interest I’d like to know what is the smallest (portable) device with a reasonable quality keyboard that could run an appropriate Linux distro and emacs and people have tested for actual long-term usability.
I’m looking at UMPCs and various 7-inch mini laptops you see on eBay.
Thanks!
Pine phone + Keyboard Case?
Keyboard quality?
Poor, some keys tends to get stuck too often.
If you don’t plan supporting Pine64 it’s better to buy another portable keyboard.
Yeah, that was my impression from reading the reviews
OK for the size. Not a great size though
Check mini PCs made by GPD.
Port emacs to collapseos and the world is your playground.
It would require more than a little work, but I’d be willing to bet that it’s possible to get it to run on a microcontroller with some external RAM and an SD card attached to it. The work comes from the fact that you won’t really have a full OS in the sense that you’d prefer.
Product - Shenzhen GPD Technology Co., Ltd. GPD?
And I agree with using a shell version(or ssh) on Android/iPad maybe a more reasonable way.
Haven’t tried it, but you could use a smartphone + Corne Choc + trackpoint
It’s wired. There are versions with Bluetooth but no trackpoint.
It fits in a external hard disk case
I don’t know if you mean smallest, or cheapest, but my Galaxy S23 runs emacs
Not sure if Bryan Lunduke’s old videos are still up on YouTube or if he pay walled them, but he used to talk about these things a lot. Small Linux handhelds with physical keyboard.
Of course, “comfortably” is another matter…
Add a few more inches, add a lot more bucks, meet the x1 Nano, have a ton more power, have a ton less rabbit holes.
He says he’s running emacs on an ipad, but he’s not. He’s running it on a Mac mini.
Oh I know.
I would be worried about battery life if you don’t something that runs android.
uconsole, but the waiting time is somewhat Loooong now…
Oh, I love that. In fact, I love the DevTerm Kit even more… Very interesting!
I have a Lenovo Chromebook Duet 2 and I haven’t regretted it at all. Graphical Emacs is important for me as I want to view my notes on it and I cant do that well with the terminal version. So that removed any Android/Apple tablet. Unfortunate as it may be, I don’t think there is any mature, budget Linux tablet and Chromebooks, which support Linux out of the box are the closest to that.
It’s lightweight, with a 10 inch screen and I can comfortably use Emacs with the keyboard it comes with. You could go even smaller screen, but imo, after one point it stops being comfortable. So this is a very fine solution for me
Any modern phone + a bluetooth keyboard
Modular, you can pick whichever keyboard you want and choose how you want to trade off size & usability. There are some foldable keyboards that pack down pretty small.
Ive considered this question too. But I would opt for something other than a tablet. I want to type on the train. And anything lesser than a small laptop Im saying no. Maybe I have no experience, but tablet with no hinge on my lap, noooooo. Im already typing on my BT keyboard with my mobile, and its not ideal. Still havent bought the Thinkpad x280 that I planned.