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PortableApps.com

PortableApps.com
Portable apps logo.png
PortableAppsMenu0-5 Screenshot.png
PortableApps.com Platform menu
Original author(s) John T. Haller
Developer(s) Rare Ideas, LLC
Initial release November 20, 2006; 10 years ago (2006-11-20)
Stable release
14.2 / 28 September 2016; 6 months ago (2016-09-28)
Operating system Microsoft Windows
Size 8 MB
License GPLv2, LGPLv2, MIT License, MPL 1.1, wxWindows Library Licence
Website portableapps.com

PortableApps.com is a website offering many free, commonly used Windows applications that have been specially packaged for portability. These portable applications can be used from removable media such as USB flash drives. User data is stored in a subfolder, allowing the user to upgrade or move the software without affecting the data. To remove the software, a user can simply delete the main folder.

The site was founded by John T. Haller and includes contributions from over 100 people, including developers, designers and translators.

The project started out of a portable version of Mozilla Firefox in March 2004. John T. Haller then expanded the project to include Mozilla Thunderbird and OpenOffice.org. Soon the open source group of portable programs outgrew Haller's personal website and he moved it to a community site, PortableApps.com. The site currently hosts various projects created by forum members. The site is also used for bug reporting and suggestions. Some PortableApps distributions are hosted on SourceForge.

Application installers designed for use with the PortableApps.com menu follow the convention of using filenames ending in a .paf.exe extension, include HTML documentation and store data in the Data directory, allowing for simple backup of data with the PortableApps.com Backup utility. Installers intended for use with the PortableApps.com menu should be NSIS installers, generated with the PortableApps.com Installer, but can be compressed archives with self extractors, or any installer executable.

The majority of applications can run on most computers with Windows 2000 or later. Many apps will also run under Wine on Unix-like operating systems. Older versions of many apps support Windows 95/98/Me, but no new releases support these systems.


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