Market Explanation:
In most cases web-based desktops are just lots of ridiculous graphics and poorly designed applications that pretend to offer you what you already have on your real desktop. However, for people handling business over a secure network (say at work or in a university lab) web-based desktops seem pretty novel. For instance, in some cases they allow you to install your own set of applications. One particular gray area, more of a moral gray area, though is how anonymous your internet activity becomes while browsing through a JAVA remote-access desktop. For the most part, if you're using a computer with JAVA and want to browse a website that is being blocked by the network you can get around it with a remote-desktop since it uses someone else's internet access and processor.
Overview:
A number of web-based desktops have come and gone over the years even before the whole web 2.0 thing. Some are made of Flash while other more advanced ones use JAVA. Ulteo is one of those more advanced ones that uses JAVA and Linux. Once you sign up you get a whole Linux based OS to toy around with from inside of your web-browser. Provided with the Linux OS are a couple of standard applications like Firefox and OpenOffice, granted they are slightly dated versions of those applications.
Synchronization:
Something Ulteo just did that makes this service much more meaningful is how they now have something called the Ulteo Document Synchonizer. Obviously from the name it's a synchronization tool for editing files off of your original desktop environment, apparently you can even pick multiple desktops in case you have a number of computers that need to be synced. At the moment this particular utility is only available to Windows users.
Speed:
Ulteo is surprisingly quick especially with that dated OpenOffice 2.3. Additionally browsing the internet through the installed Firefox is a surprisingly pleasant experience. I'd even go so far as to say it's possibly faster than my own internet access. The thing I like most about browsing the internet through Ulteo though is how everything loads. Loading webpages in my Firefox browser on Windows Vista loads things in chunks so the page rearranges while it loads. However, using Firefox through Ulteo creates this nice illusion that the page loads in one fluid movement.
LINKS:
- Ulteo
- Ulteo - Document Synchonizer
- Del.ico.us - web_based desktop links