I have used emacs on my iPad extensively via ssh, I've setup my client to essentially have gestures for the more common but keyboard intensive shortcuts, and like the experience enough that I'm looking for ways to do the same with touchpad gestures on my Mac. I miss my Touchstream keyboard sometimes because it had a prebuilt gesture mode for emacs that mapped all its standard gestures to emacs shortcuts out of the box, which also made it far more friendly to use Dvorak with emacs. 。 ° · 。 · ˚ ˚ ˛ ˚ ˛. Kristopher Browne 。° 。 ° 。˚ ˛ · ˚ ˚ ˛. kris.browne at gmail.com ★Happy★ 。 · ˚ ˚ ˛. 。★Holidays!★ 。 。° _Π__ 。 ˚ ˚ ˛ ˚ ˛ /_____/ \。˚ ˚ ˛ ˚ l田田田 |門| ˚ ˛ ˚ ˛ · On Feb 15, 2013, at 10:13, Florin Iucha <florin at iucha.net> wrote: > On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 06:19:34AM -0800, Olwe Bottorff wrote: >> I'm confused about having linux on a tablet. I've seen instructions >> for how to "root" your, say, Nexus 10. What does this do? I'd like to >> put a linux on a tablet and be able to use Emacs (for org-mode!) and >> a terminal. Does "rooting" a tablet give me some sort of linux with >> touch screen capabilities? Or is it just a regular linux on a laptop >> from that point? > > Emacs: the original multi-touch app! > > [Ctrl]-[Meta]-[F]-[T]-[W]-[!] > > Cheers, > florin > > -- > Beware of software written by optimists! > _______________________________________________ > TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota > tclug-list at mn-linux.org > http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list