I recently learned that you can make many apps such as browsers portable on a USB drive and I was wondering, aside from being able to take it on the go, what other advantages does portable apps have? I know it won’t take up much storage. Is there any privacy benefits?
I’ve seen them used less for privacy and more for getting around permissions/limitations on controlled systems like work laptops. (That’s assuming work devices haven’t locked down or disabled USB drives.)
More often than not, there will still be some artifacts left over, whether it’s recently access files or terminal history that indicates a portable device/app was used.
If you’re looking at USB things specifically designed for privacy, something like Tails is where it’s at.
Ah ok. So it seems to work better for work and personal, makes sense. Something that can still work for me, but really not much privacy benefits. Ok, thank you for the feedback. * I already have Tails downloaded, so I do have a USB specifically designed for privacy all set. Just need to use it more!
I’ve only seen it used to play games on school / public computers. The game runs from the USB, since the user doesn’t have permission to install software on the computer’s harddrive.
Installation restriction at work. You may have rights to execute .exe but not to install app.
I also have a dozen of utility app I daily use (image viewer, PDF viewer, process killer, inkscape, gimp, etc…). I just have to zip my progs folder to backup and I won’t need to reinstall everything if my computer die (which happened last month BTW).
Use software that you are not allowed to install mostly.
Not having to set everything up again wen inevitably hafta reinstall Windows from 0 again
… that is if portable app’s actually portable , if your “”“portable”“” app’s just the
.exebut everything still stored in«USER FOLDER»/AppData/.\*I’m stealing something from your house ‼️I like it when an app seems a little bit poorly made, I can just try it out and when it doesn’t work I can simply delete it. Much better than installing it with some random shell script or handmade package file. You never know if installing won’t fuck up something or uninstalling it leaves stuff behind or removes stuff is shouldn’t.
There’s a few apps I use once in a blue moon to convert some files, they all sit in one little folder not hurting anything till I need them. That folder is pretty old and has moved multiple systems, but they still work great for what they do.
This was one of the uses I was thinking of. To test apps and if I don’t like it, can just simply delete it. Good to know I’m not the only one. Thank you.
Privacy benefits would vary with different apps - you’d need to really dig into that.
Any purported benefits might stop mum from checking your browsing history but wouldn’t stop a determined attacker, although they would likely need to have things in place to monitor you before you showed up with your USB drive.
I can’t really think of what the practical benefits actually might be?
It might feel private, and it might even feel convenient in some cases, but as a general practice it seems like a whole lot of horsing around for very little benefit.
One of the uses I was thinking of was putting a password manager on a USB. Not only it’s portable, but I don’t have my passwords in the cloud, it’s offline storage. And so long as I encrypt the USB, access to the drive would be denied. But I don’t know if its worth it.
Hmm… you probably want your passwords on your phone?
I use keepassxc and sync with syncthing.
Its not off-line, but its not on public infrastructure.
I have a utils die full of portable apps. They are just things I use occasionally that I don’t want to actually install, like a cd writer, sysinternals, benchmarking apps, mkv tools, and more.
I used them on Windows to manage a handful of websites. I’d have a Websites folder with sub folders for each site, and a few portable apps in each one. I’d have Thunderbird and Firefox at least, and they’d keep everything separate.
For me at least, it made things a lot easier than trying to remember to log in to profiles etc individually :)






