China has released its first homegrown open-source desktop operating system, named OpenKylin, state media said, as the country steps up efforts to cut reliance on U.S. technology.
Released on Wednesday, and based on the existing open-source Linux operating system, China's version was built by a community of about 4,000 developers, and is used in its space programme and industries such as finance and energy, they added.
I love how a dialogue box pops up if you are half way through a line and want to click somewhere else to copy or check something. All just to tell you that you haven't finished the line. Thankfully there is a setting buried somewhere to turn that off.