Ubuntu One Beta With Windows Support: Review

In October, when Canonical released Ubuntu 10.10, some of the product’s most talked-about new features involved the expansion of the personal cloud service, Ubuntu One, beyond the popular Linux-based OS to other platforms, such as Apple’s iOS, Google’s Android and Microsoft’s Windows.

At the time, I was able to test Ubuntu One with iOS and Android, but the service’s Windows support was still “coming soon.” Recently, Canonical launched a limited public beta of Ubuntu One Windows, and I put the service through its paces, adding a Windows XP SP3 client to the Ubuntu One account that I use on my work and home machines.

The service’s Windows client — while rough in places and limited in breadth of its support for Ubuntu One’s capabilities — worked as advertised. It kept an “Ubuntu One” folder in the home directories of my Ubuntu systems synced up with a folder of the same name in the My Documents folder of my XP test VM.

A promising service

For Ubuntu One users who also run Windows, this new Windows support is promising — and the service would benefit from similar support for OS X and for other Linux distributions, as well. For those who aren’t already using Ubuntu One, Dropbox is a better solution for multiplatform file synchronisation, for it supports more platforms and is more mature than is Ubuntu One.

Both services offer free accounts with up to 2GB of storage space, and additional Ubuntu One features, such as synchronisation for Tomboy Notes and other CouchDB-enabled applications, aren’t yet available for the Windows client. Beyond its initial 2GB of free storage space, additional storage on Ubuntu One can be purchased in 20GB increments for $2.99 (£1.90) per month or $29.99 (£19.05) per year.

The Ubuntu One client beta runs on Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7. For Windows XP, the software requires Service Pack 3 with the Windows Installer 4.5 update and version 4.0 of the .Net Framework. When I installed the client on Windows XP SP3, I was unable to complete my first sync until after installing version 3.5 of the .Net client as well.

With those prerequisites out of the way, I found that the process of registering my Windows machine with the online service ran much like it did on my Ubuntu systems — I entered my user name and password for the service into a login dialog, and, once I was authenticated, I could see my Windows instance listed among the other machines and devices I’d previously linked up to Ubuntu One.

Unlike the Ubuntu version of the client, the Windows beta doesn’t sync files automatically when they’re created or modified — rather, I had to hit a “Synchronise Now” command, or configure the client to sync on a schedule. According to the product’s documentation, automatic sync is in the works, as is support for synchronising files and folders outside of the Ubuntu One folder.

Jason Brooks eWEEK USA 2014. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved

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Jason Brooks eWEEK USA 2014. Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. All Rights Reserved

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