@wezm It's snappy. It *feels* like BeOS if you ever ran that before. The whole thing is light and responsive. It has a way of letting the OS continue to feel responsive and snappy even if an app has run away with the rest of the CPU.
It's native webkit based browser chokes on anything too complex though. They have Otter Browser available and it's quite a bit better. They could still benefit from Firefox. But I could get a lot done in Otter Browser I think.
@wezm With both Libre Office and Caligra Office their good in terms of office software. Didn't see any calendaring apps available. Which is sad, I consider caldav kind of a requirement these days.
It's still a single user OS though with all the security that implies; and its in bad need of a NextCloud or SyncThing client or something of the like.
@wezm they had a personal edition for free and a pro for purchase. I *think* personal edition was limited in installation size.
@wezm @trashHeap We already fully implemented POSIX multiuser; you can start opensshd and log in as separate users, etc. The GUI doesn't take advantage of this because we haven't had the time.