Clear isn't a toy, it's a proof-of-concept, and it proved its concept extremely well. But like all PoCs, they're not exactly intended to be practical or widely used. It is worth Intel continuing to work on this to prove what you can do with properly-optimized software on modern hardware. We don't really have another reference point.
If Clear were a toy, it would have no functional purpose (compared to anything else) other than "look what I can do". But Clear has a very distinct functional purpose, which is appealing enough that some people consider using it as their main distro, despite the crappy package management.
If Clear were a toy, it would have no functional purpose (compared to anything else) other than "look what I can do". But Clear has a very distinct functional purpose, which is appealing enough that some people consider using it as their main distro, despite the crappy package management.
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