My First Month with Zo Computer: A Honest Review

*A personal server that actually works*

I want to start by saying I’m not an influencer. I don’t get excited about new SaaS tools, and I don’t have a media kit. So when I say Zo Computer has genuinely changed how I work, I mean it.

## What Is Zo Computer?

In the simplest terms, Zo Computer is a personal server in the cloud — your own virtual machine that you control completely, with a layer of AI assistance built right in. It’s not shared hosting, it’s not a VPS where you’re left to figure everything out alone. You get a Linux box with root access, persistent storage, and an AI agent that can actually *do things* — run commands, write code, manage files, search the web, and more.

## The Core Features That Stood Out

### Your Files, Actually Yours

I’ve spent years being frustrated by scattered files — documents in Google Drive, notes in Notion, spreadsheets in Airtable, photos wherever. Zo gives you a unified file system. I can drop files anywhere, organize things the way *I* think, and access them from anywhere. No more hunting through six apps to find a document.

The built-in search is genuinely fast. I’m not waiting for indexing, I’m not dealing with sync conflicts. It just works.

### The AI Actually Does Things

Most “AI assistants” are good at answering questions. Zo is good at *doing things*. In my first month, I’ve used it to:

– Research and summarize technical topics, saving the results directly to files
– Manage my investments — I have a spreadsheet of stock tickers and Zo fetches current prices and adds them as a column automatically
– Keep a running notes file that persists across sessions (“take a note that I cancelled the Blink gym membership”)
– Run a full development environment, including compiling code and installing tools
– Research things to do around NYC and text myself curated recommendations

The key difference: it doesn’t just tell you what to do. It *does* it. It runs commands, writes files, sends texts, sends emails.

### Web Access Without the Tedium

I used to hate tasks like “go extract my last credit card statement” or “check this website for updates.” Now Zo handles it. It can browse the web as part of a task — click buttons, fill forms, extract data. For someone who runs several online accounts and hates repetitive web tasks, this alone is worth the subscription.

### No Lock-In

This is important to me. My data is on *my* server. I’m not locked into some proprietary format that only works in Zo’s ecosystem. The files are standard Linux files. I could move everything to another server tomorrow if I wanted to. Zo respects the idea that you actually own your data.

## What Could Be Better

A few rough edges:

– **The initial setup** was a bit confusing — the terminology (workspace, host profile, agents) takes a few hours to internalize. Once you’re past that, it’s intuitive.
– **Some tasks require context switching** — if I’m working on something complex, Zo doesn’t always have all the context from earlier in the conversation. But this is a limitation of any session-based AI, not unique to Zo.
– **The mobile app** is functional but basic. For quick looks and edits it’s fine, but the desktop experience is where it’s at.

## Who Is This For?

I’d recommend Zo Computer to:

– **Technical users** who want a personal server with actual AI integration
– **Researchers and writers** who want a persistent, organized workspace
– **Developers** who need a always-on Linux environment they can access from anywhere
– **Anyone who hates context switching** between a dozen apps and wants a central hub

It’s probably *not* for someone who just wants a better chatbot, or who is deeply invested in Apple’s or Google’s ecosystem and doesn’t mind the lock-in.

## The Bottom Line

I’ve been computing professionally for over two decades, and I’ve tried virtually every “productivity” tool that has come and gone. Zo Computer is the first new computing paradigm in years that actually feels like it respects how I work — rather than demanding I adapt to it.

It’s still early, and there are rough edges. But the core premise — a personal server + capable AI agent — is exactly right. If you’ve been frustrated by the fragmentation of modern computing, give Zo a shot.

*You can find Zo Computer at zocomputer.com, and reach me at truman@truman.net.*

*Published from Zo Computer — where the AI actually does the work.*