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Welcome to the Inuva wiki. The last computer you will ever need.

What is Inuva?

I'm building an operating system based on web technologies. It's designed to offer a familiar user experience like traditional operating systems but it has the added benefit of being responsive and accessible on any device with an internet connection. Inuva leverages powerful servers to offload intensive tasks from client devices, such as programming, CPU-intensive video encoding, and large-scale data parsing...

Inuva provides a user interface that runs on top of a Linux distribution, accessible via a browser. The aim is to deliver a capable cloud-based operating system that is both extensible and customizable by users, free from privacy concerns.

Why would you use Inuva?

I believe that modern hardware is way too overkill and expensive for the average daily needs. Storage capacity feels like it's shrinking, even though you haven't saved that many photos! It's likely you'll need to replace your phone after four years because it doesn't perform as it used to. This cycle generates excessive e-waste and needless expenses. Just bought a €500+ smartphone, and after a few years, you need to do it all over again?

Inuva assigns a server to users as needed, effectively managing server resources by reallocating them once they're no longer in use. This strategy of offloading computationally intensive tasks enables client devices to conserve power and extend their lifespan

How's it going?

with robust hardware, but a fully featured operating system is still on the horizon. As a single developer, I'm dedicating my full-time efforts to this service, aiming to build a customer base that supports other developers.

Three key features in development:

  • ✅ Standalone version: Avoid subscription fees by purchasing Inuva to deploy on your own server with the lightweight interface. - done

  • App Store: Design, publish, and monetize your apps on the app store. I'm building an SDK and API for operating system interaction.

  • Video streaming: Initiate native Linux apps (or Wine-compatible .exe files) and stream the output to the user while sending input back to the server.

I'm eager for feedback from fellow tech enthusiasts. What are your thoughts on this product? Are you intrigued, or would you like more insight into the development process?

Current features

You are allowed to use SSH and access the root user at your own risk. You can break stuff or make the OS top functioning correctly. Use at your own risk.

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