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August 31, 2007

Giving G.ho.st a spin and reminded of FTP in Windows Explorer

add-ins and toolbars, How To — by TDavid @ 5:10 pm PST
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G.ho.st stands for Global Hosted Operating SysTem and is one of the more ambitious computer in a browser window options I’ve checked out to date. Registration and use of G.ho.st is free and comes with 3 GB of space. You’ll need to confirm your email address before being able to login.

G.ho.st screenshots: registration

G.ho.st looks like a desktop and has similar functionality except one major downside: everything happens in a browser window. While the maximized browser is about as stripped down as one can get, I still feel like I’m working in a box. It just doesn’t feel right to me. What about you?

G.ho.st screenshots: desktop

Other Annoyances include:

- the g.ho.st browser is really a proxy to other websites and thus some sites don’t display properly, including this blog and any other that blocks hotlinking through proxies.
- the URL in the browser window not changing when I clicked on pages which negated the use of copy/paste of the location bar, something I use frequently

Remember FTP in Windows Explorer
One neat thing I discovered while using g.ho.st — or rather rediscovered because I keep forgetting that the functionality is there — is the ease by which you can use FTP in Windows Explorer. Hold down the Microsoft key and press the E key to launch Windows Explorer. Then type:

ftp://YOUR_G.Ho.st_username@g.ho.st

After entering in your G.ho.st password you will be able to drag and drop files from your real desktop to your virtual one. Try this with your web hosting FTP account. It’s a handy way to use a basic FTP editor when you’re on a Windows box without any other kind of FTP, but beware that passwords are passed in plain text. Use web folders instead if you’d like a secure connection.

In summary, G.ho.st reminded me what features I like and use on the desktop and how a virtual desktop doesn’t give me enough reasons to use regularly at this time. Maybe in the future when the quirks are worked out and we can move outside the confines of a browser. I’m curious what readers think of G.ho.st and virtual desktops in general?

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RSS Feed comments for this post 5 Comments »

  1. Thank you for reviewing G.ho.st. We have a new release live today with new graphics, G.ho.st mail (your ID@G.ho.st) and other improvements.

    Rami

    Comment by Rami — September 3, 2007 @ 3:12 am PST

  2. Thanks for reviewing G.ho.st. Actually G.ho.st has a new look & feel now and many additional features added just after this review. Some features like “G.ho.st Mail” that comes also with 3GB of email storage and “G.ho.st Instant Messenger (IM)” are alpha for now, but soon enough they will mature to beta later on this month.

    Please check it again.

    Comment by Adel Hazboun — September 3, 2007 @ 5:16 am PST

  3. Thanks for reviewing G.ho.st. We have a brand new look-and-feel and mail service with another 3GB since you reviewed it!

    If you open G.ho.st on FireFox and press F11 immediately (before logging in) you can get out of the box and have a full screen.

    Please keep the feedback coming

    Zvi

    Comment by Zvi Schreiber — September 3, 2007 @ 5:43 am PST

  4. Rami and Adel - I’ll check the new version out, thanks.

    Hi Zvi - I’m familiar with the F11 hotkey, but you’re still in a box. You need to hide and then unhide the toolbars which is an additional nuisance (unless there is some plugin/trick/setting/tweak that will auto remove those on F11?). It’s sort of a wannabe full screen … still constrained by the browser which is the biggest weakness for any virtual desktop running in a browser.

    Comment by TDavid — September 3, 2007 @ 4:01 pm PST

  5. […] the lengthily adored Make You Go Hmm: G.ho.st is a virtual desktop, useful if you work across several different computers each day. Aerogel is the lowest density […]

    Pingback by Crushing Krisis » Acting Agents, Resizing Smart, Blue Collar to Middle Class, Indie Rock Stars, et al — September 6, 2007 @ 5:14 am PST


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