Friday, July 20, 2007

eyeOS

Most people are familiar with google documents and the variety of offerings there. If you aren't get a google account and have a play.

The common idea of what an OS is such as Winblows, OSX and *nix systems is widely understood. So what is a WebOS?

First of all a web OS is not an OS as such, the name is misleading. However it does (through a web interface) provide features that you associate with an OS, such as a window manager and applications. Any words i type here will only confuse you. But in 30 seconds you will see what it is if you read about it on the official eyeOS site. Or even better you test drive it on eyeos.info. Just click where it says "new user" set a username and password then use them to log into the system.

What you have is a virtual desktop with (all be it limited applications at the moment) which you can access from anywhere in the world.

What's it useful for?

Well, For a starter it will run on any operating system that can run firefox, IE, safari or an up to date web browser with Java support etc... So hardware requirements are low.

It is a gateway to/alternative method of thin client computing with a twist. You can access your thin client system without any specialist software or hardware. and you can access it from anywhere in the world.

It is easy to install your own eyeOS server. If you go to the downloads page and get the latest copy, unzip it to a directory on a web server and follow the instructions. On my old test system it was up and running in under 2 mins including me filling in the password and configuration fields and changing directory permissions.

At the moment it is an interesting idea with bags of potential. Who knows in years to come company offices will be running WebOS servers which can be accessed from internal and external networks holding the day to day company centrally but accessible from anywhere in the world with an internet connection. The environment will be saved by the lifespan of computers being extended and... and... the possibilities are exciting.

While I doubt that such systems will replace desktop OS's and software as we know them complexity due to many tasks requiring specific hardware, propriatry software etc... Not to mention power users who will want to break out of the "simple, safe environment" this is an interesting vision of the future of computing in at least some areas of office and business use.

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