> Well, those low-cost devices are typically:
> * usable only for development/hacking/toying around, due to their form
>   factor (bare board), peripherals and/or (lack of) computing power,

Certainly not, there are many ARM devices with processors that are well over 
the 2 GHz clock mark, have several gigabytes of RAM and lots of other goodies 
for under $100 USD. And they're certainly not just "bare boards", but full 
products. Just the boards are even less!

> * extremely slow at everything including building packages (just lo> ok at
> how slow the relatively fast Koji ARM builders are; low-cost devices are a
> lot worse than that),

They're not speed demons, but they're certainly fast.

> * so bare that you have to spend a multiple of the purchase price of the
>   device to add needed development equipment (RAM, storage, I/O
> peripherals, etc.),

I don't know what you're referring to here, but if it's the ARM device I 
mentioned, see my first response..

> so I am not convinced that they are really useful targets for developers.

Installing Fedora on an ARM device is a great first step into alternative 
architectures, and could even be a gateway to embedded system development.

-- 
John M. Harris, Jr. <joh...@splentity.com>
Splentity
https://splentity.com/

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