The idea behind the PortableApps Suite is to provide an entire portable environment as a single installable package comprising everything you need: applications and additional utilities that make portable computing more efficient. In addition to the programs mentioned above, the suite contains more than a dozen desktop applications.
You don't have to be a savvy computer user to install the PortableApps Suite: just download the version you want (you can choose between the Standard and Lite versions), double-click on the downloaded file, point to your USB stick, and the installer does the rest. The result is a neat environment with a wide range of preinstalled portable applications from the OpenOffice.org Portable office suite to the ClamWin Portable anti-virus tool. The Standard version takes a 512MB USB stick, while the Lite version, where OpenOffice.org Portable is replaced with AbiWord, fits on a 256MB USB drive.
If this much code is too big to fit your USB stick -- or if you prefer to handpick the applications -- you can opt for the bare-bones version of the PortableApps Suite, which doesn't include any applications, and download individual applications from the PortableApps Web site and install them one by one. Most applications at the site are available in the new Portable Application Format, which makes them simple to add to the PortableApps Suite. Simply press on the Options button in the PortableApps Suite panel, select Install a New App, and point to the PAF package. You can also install a portable application in the PAF format even if you don't use the PortableApps Suite. Moreover, the PortableApps Suite recognizes non-PAF applications, too. Copy your portable applications to the PortableApps folder, press on the Options button in the PortableApps Suite panel, select Refresh App Icons, and the application's executable appears in the list of installed applications.
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The PortableApps Suite runs on Windows, or on Linux via WINE, which is a major boon for Linux users. This does, of course, require that WINE be installed on any Linux host machine. While the chances of stumbling upon a Linux-based machine at a hotel or an Internet café are still slim, it's nice to know that you can use your applications and access your documents on Linux, too. Just don't count on all the features and applications working 100%. The PortableApps panel, backup utility, AbiWord, Firefox, OpenOffice.org, Thunderbird, and several other applications work fine under WINE, but ClamWin, the GIMP, and Sunbird will likely fail.
The portable versions of Firefox and OpenOffice.org that are included in the PortableApps Suite also sport an interesting enhancement. You can now run them off a CD very much like you would do with a live CD Linux distribution. You do need to tweak Firefox and OpenOffice.org before you burn them to a CD, but this is not a difficult thing to do. Although the live versions of Firefox and OpenOffice.org may not be as useful as their portable siblings, they are appropriate for users who want to try Firefox and OpenOffice.org without installing anything on their machines -- exactly as with live CD Linux distributions -- but I don't see this feature as appealing to most users.
Some users might find the PortableApps Suite limiting: it isn't tweakable enough to satisfy the needs of power users. However, its sheer simplicity and polished interface will appeal to people who want to be able to use a portable computing environment with minimum efforts and maximum style.
Dmitri Popov is a freelance writer whose articles have appeared in Russian, British, German, and Danish computer magazines.
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While it's certainly cool to have PortableApps if you are a Windows user, it is surely much cooler (in fact freezing cold..., nah -- let me rephrase that: it's hot as hell) to have <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/" title="atekon.de"> "PortableKliks" </a atekon.de> if you are a Linux user.
On Linux I use <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/" title="atekon.de">klik bundles</a atekon.de> every day. klik is a great little project that implements an brilliant idea: "1 application = 1 file = 1 click" . Hopefully this idea will make its breakthrough on a much wider scale and get adopted as a standard way to add new userspace applications on top of what the distros ship.
klik is awesome. One click to get the file (=application) and run it.
You can't even talk about "installing" it. Because what klik does has nothing to do any more with "installation" as we know it. Easy as eating cake...
klik encapsulates all binaries, direct dependencies and data files of an application into 1 compressed archive image.
In contrast to PortableApps for Windows (which right now does not offer more than a few dozen of applications, though that may change for the better quite soon), <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/" title="atekon.de"> "PortableKliks" </a atekon.de> offers thousands of bundles. (Though, please be aware: klik is currently still more in Alpha quality than in a completely polished and mature state; however; it works very well for many distros and many different software programs).
Oh, and it is truely portable as well: run a klik bundle from a USB thumbdrive, a CD-RW, or a memory card -- or even simply copy it to a different Linux system (with a different distro installed) to use it there.... No installation, Ma!
See also the <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/wiki/index.php/User's_FAQ" title="atekon.de">klik User's FAQ</a atekon.de>
Recommendation: don't miss to look at these PortableKlik apps:
The author of this article, Dimitri, surely must be completely unaware of klik so far. I'd be looking forward to see him research about klik, testdrive it and write about it in his columns on NewsForge. klik surely will one of the hottest topics on Linux in the coming years...
"I cannot put the klik on my USB and carry it do a different machine and run directly off USB."
You're not well informed then. Have you ever tried it? Or are you talking of the back of your guts?
Of course you can do what you say you can't. Right now, I'm running Opera 9.10 from a CD-RW (which in essence is not different from running it from an USB device). And guess what? I downloaded and made my klik for Opera 9.10 on a SuSE-9.1, burned it on CD, and stuffed the CD into a drive that is hooked to a SUSE-10.1.
Your turn again...
On Linux I am a happy <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/" title="atekon.de">klik</a atekon.de> user. klik is a great little project that implements an awesome idea: "1 application = 1 file = 1 click".
One click to get the file (=application) and run it. Easy as eating cake...
You can't even talk about "installing" it. Because what klik does has nothing to do any more with "installation" as we know it.
klik encapsulates all binaries, direct dependencies and data files of an application into 1 compressed archive image.
Oh, and it is truely portable as well: run a klik bundle from a USB thumbdrive, a CD-RW, or a memory card -- or even simply copy it to a different Linux system (with a different distro installed) to use it there.... No installation, Ma!
See also the <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/wiki/index.php/User's_FAQ" title="atekon.de">klik User's FAQ</a atekon.de>
Recommendation: don't miss to look at these <a href="http://klik.atekon.de/" title="atekon.de">PortableLinuxKliks</a atekon.de>:
I like!
Posted by: Anonymous Coward on December 19, 2006 02:00 AMUnfortunately, one app on the website, namely "PStart" is not open source.<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:(
That sucks.<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:(
I would like to see a portable version of Apache, that would be nice.
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