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AIOS-SO is a “sovereign Linux OS” project showcased on the CCMAI website. It is based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, boots as a Live ISO, opens into the i3 desktop by default, and comes with the Hermes AI agent and the AIOS Voice voice-control module built in. Its core positioning is not as a traditional cloud AI tool, but as a local Linux environment that runs an AI assistant, voice interaction, terminal access, and file-system capabilities on the user’s own machine.
The project emphasizes a local-first approach: models run locally via Ollama, and the main text mentions the use of the LinuxPilot local model. Hermes can process user input and access tools, skills, web search, the terminal, and the file system, making it suitable for local desktop control, command-line assistance, file operations, and automation tasks. Privacy is its clearest selling point: no Cloud APIs, no telemetry, no analytics, and no usage tracking, with data staying on the user’s machine by default.
The crawled content does not disclose pricing, licensing, commercial editions, free tiers, or paid support information. It only states that the system is provided as a Live ISO, which suggests users may be able to try it by booting the image. However, whether it is free to download, open source, or backed by any maintenance commitment is not clearly stated in the text.
Its strengths are a clear architecture focused on privacy, autonomy, and offline control; being based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS and Ollama also makes it easy for Linux users to understand and extend. The combination of voice control with terminal and file-system access also has strong practical value. The limitations are mainly around limited disclosure: there is no information on hardware requirements, model performance, speech-recognition accuracy, how web search is implemented, the installation process, or support channels. The i3 desktop and local-model ecosystem may also be less friendly for general users.
It is best suited to advanced Linux users, developers, privacy-sensitive teams, and experimenters who want a local AI assistant with reduced cloud dependency. Chinese-language support is not mentioned, including the interface, Chinese voice input, and Chinese model performance, so these are hard to assess. The source text provides no information about access from China; domain availability, GitHub access, image download speed, and payment methods are all unknown. If it cannot be used smoothly, alternatives include Ollama, local LLM toolchains, or building a voice and agent setup on Ubuntu manually.
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