Puter from HeyPuter
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wrote on Mar 7, 2024, 2:59 AM last edited by
Puter, the Internet OS, is now open-source!
Today marks a pivotal moment in our mission to build a new, internet-based operating system for all users. We are excited to announce that Puter is now open source!
For the past three years, we've poured our hearts and skills into developing Puter, guided by our vision to make a completely new operating system from scratch. As Puter steps into the open-source community, we warmly invite developers and enthusiasts to explore, contribute, and collaborate on the Puter platform. Your contributions and feedback are crucial as we work together to enhance and evolve Puter.
Source: E-Mail from the Puter team.
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This is fun and feels quite polished actually. I just have no clue what real use-case it solves.
wrote on Mar 7, 2024, 3:01 AM last edited by@nebulon I use a remote desktop and it solves a bunch of issues.
I can see where Puter is headed as a self-hosted remote "desktop as a service" (DaaS).
The market is growing since the streaming has become faster with almost no discernable lag. -
wrote on Mar 7, 2024, 6:53 AM last edited by
I don't understand what use it is either, can someone expand on "solves a bunch of issues" ?
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wrote on Mar 7, 2024, 7:46 AM last edited by
From Github:
Puter can be used as:
- An alternative to Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, etc. with a fresh interface and powerful features.
- Remote desktop environment for servers and workstations.
- A platform for building and hosting websites, web apps, and games.
- A friendly, open-source project and community to learn about web development, cloud computing, distributed systems, and much more!
Don't know if or how it syncs but the interface is definitely more "fun" than Nextcloud
If the add an internet browser, it would be even better -
wrote on Mar 7, 2024, 11:05 PM last edited by
It's very easy to install and run on Linux on localhost.
Works well. However, installed locally it's useless as it's supposed to be an "Internet OS".Now, again, in theory it should run on a LAMP stack however since npm is trying to write to the disk on a READ ONLY part of of the OS.
I tried, but we encounter the exact same problem I've spoke about before, and also covered with more details on this post while proposing a new Typescript app, Payload.
If one of the fearless devs here @girish or @nebulon could finally take a look at this, at least so we can know if this is something that can be possible, that would be cool.
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I don't understand what use it is either, can someone expand on "solves a bunch of issues" ?
wrote on Mar 8, 2024, 1:12 AM last edited by@AartJansen Remote Desktops with Persistence is like having a second computer.
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.
I also spin up new desktop computers for particular purposes, research, testing, etc.If Puter comes with an ability to run a browser, effectively I can run that browser to access the local internet like a sort of VPN - it would be easy to overcome restrictions.
Hope this helps.
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@AartJansen Remote Desktops with Persistence is like having a second computer.
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.
I also spin up new desktop computers for particular purposes, research, testing, etc.If Puter comes with an ability to run a browser, effectively I can run that browser to access the local internet like a sort of VPN - it would be easy to overcome restrictions.
Hope this helps.
wrote on Mar 8, 2024, 1:23 AM last edited by@jagan Yes, but useful only if it can be run from a remote server, because on localhost:4000 it's useless. Why would I run this on localhost to then open a web browser to run SOME apps in it, while I can run anything natively or on VMs.
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@AartJansen Remote Desktops with Persistence is like having a second computer.
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.
I also spin up new desktop computers for particular purposes, research, testing, etc.If Puter comes with an ability to run a browser, effectively I can run that browser to access the local internet like a sort of VPN - it would be easy to overcome restrictions.
Hope this helps.
wrote on Mar 8, 2024, 5:07 AM last edited by@jagan said in Puter from HeyPuter:
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.That’s my use case as well!
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@AartJansen Remote Desktops with Persistence is like having a second computer.
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.
I also spin up new desktop computers for particular purposes, research, testing, etc.If Puter comes with an ability to run a browser, effectively I can run that browser to access the local internet like a sort of VPN - it would be easy to overcome restrictions.
Hope this helps.
wrote on Mar 8, 2024, 5:56 PM last edited by -
wrote on Mar 8, 2024, 6:09 PM last edited by
Lots of fun games on there. I wanted to show you my high score on the Free Kick football game, but somebody bumped me off the demo!
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wrote on Mar 9, 2024, 7:45 PM last edited by
that thring really is cool, now all it needs are many useful apps, and I think thats currently the problem, right?
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Are you guys sure that the "system" ist running in the container? I tried it for five minutes and I have the impression that it is just running the frontend in the container, but use the Puter server backend somewhere in the Internet?
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@AartJansen Remote Desktops with Persistence is like having a second computer.
Here is one use that is the most important to me:
I can't install applications or configure my work computer as I like - everything is locked down.
I use a remote desktop that I access from my work computer - all my applications run on that computer as how I need.
I also spin up new desktop computers for particular purposes, research, testing, etc.If Puter comes with an ability to run a browser, effectively I can run that browser to access the local internet like a sort of VPN - it would be easy to overcome restrictions.
Hope this helps.
wrote on Mar 10, 2024, 4:09 AM last edited by@jagan thanks. I can see that as useful, in restricted environments.
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Are you guys sure that the "system" ist running in the container? I tried it for five minutes and I have the impression that it is just running the frontend in the container, but use the Puter server backend somewhere in the Internet?
@Kubernetes interesting observation, what gives rise to those suspicions ?
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@Kubernetes interesting observation, what gives rise to those suspicions ?
@timconsidine I have no evidence, but I was assuming that storage (500MB) and account registration is not part of the docker App. Today I read that they plan to provide a full selfhosting deployment (soon?).
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Ah, I was guessing those are about the hosted version, and wouldn't be in self-hosted.
Let's see. -
wrote on Mar 10, 2024, 8:02 PM last edited by
A remote browser-accessable desktop would indeed be nice, but maybe webtop ( https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-webtop/ ) is more suitable since it really runs on the server itself...
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A remote browser-accessable desktop would indeed be nice, but maybe webtop ( https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-webtop/ ) is more suitable since it really runs on the server itself...
wrote on Mar 11, 2024, 9:02 AM last edited by@gsassen said in Puter from HeyPuter:
A remote browser-accessable desktop would indeed be nice, but maybe webtop ( https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-webtop/ ) is more suitable since it really runs on the server itself...
Wow! That community looks like a fantastic place to help people become more aware of Cloudron and what it can do.
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wrote on Mar 14, 2024, 3:22 PM last edited by
hehe, seems you can run Windows directly in a docker container too...