Checking out Jolicloud

by Kris_Tuttle on January 25, 2010

For the past month we have been an active user of Joli­cloud (www.jolicloud.com) which is a net­book OS that can most eas­ily be described as an alter­na­tive to what­ever the Google Chrome OS will be.

My Eee PC was just fine run­ning XP but because Joli­cloud can be installed in a sep­a­rate bootable par­ti­tion it’s easy to try.  In this case a choice is offered at startup so it’s easy to switch to the other OS if you don’t like Jolicloud.

Installing the OS is sim­ple and is com­pleted with one very large (600MB) down­load and run­ning the instal­la­tion pro­gram.  I found the over­all inter­face and visual ren­der­ing to be very good although at first few appli­ca­tions are pre-installed.

This ini­tial uncer­tainty was cleared away quickly once I dis­cov­ered the appli­ca­tion down­load pages where you can get all your favorites (Google Chrome, Face­book, Twit­ter, Skype, etc.)  Instal­la­tion was faster and eas­ier than on XP.  In this case the Joli­cloud man­age­ment layer made the user expe­ri­ence more con­sis­tent and it didn’t slow any­thing down.

After using the sys­tem for a month I can say that he sys­tem is very sta­ble.  I had no crashes or hard fail­ures.  In addi­tion the over­all inter­face and most actions are more suited to the lim­ited screen real estate and func­tion­al­ity of a netbook.

When I say net­book I do really mean a small light­weight client for using cloud-based appli­ca­tions.  I expect that the abil­ity to con­trol user actions and keep data and appli­ca­tion con­tent in the cloud makes this a more secure approach.

Joli­cloud is the first real alter­na­tive to Google ChromeOS for net­books and other mobile Inter­net devices.  It’s a plea­sure to use, is fast and sta­ble.  It’s too early to know how to what degree Google will link their ChromeOS to other Google soft­ware and ser­vices in terms of th user experience.

Joli­cloud has the incen­tive to be open and would make a good part­ner for Adobe.  Adobe has a suite of cloud-based appli­ca­tions that even have a UI that already looks like Joli­cloud (or vice-versa.)

The rapid pro­lif­er­a­tion of cloud-based ser­vices and appli­ca­tions means that the capa­bil­i­ties of a Joli­cloud net­book is expand­ing rapidly.

The only prob­lem I had is that the sys­tem has some trou­ble explain­ing itself in terms of updates required and their installation.

Given the choice I tend to boot my net­book in Joli­cloud unless I explic­itly need to run a Microsoft pro­gram like IE or Excel which is only about 10% of the time.

For a new OS that’s pretty high praise in my book given that it’s early days.  We’d rec­om­mend any­one with a net­book or even note­book to try it out.

As far as impli­ca­tions go I’d say it means even lower cost, more func­tional net­books on offer for gen­eral use or tied with car­rier data plans which will pro­vide the device at no charge.  If Joli­cloud catches on it could be a threat to what Google is plan­ning with ChromeOS.

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