Mobile Mac Apps
January 1, 2006 7:18 PM
What apps are available for the Mac that can be run from a USB memory stick (aka portable applications)?
I have a suite of software and tools that I carry on a memory stick such as FTP apps, media players and converters and such.
Im after a similar set of applications that can be run from a USB stick from anyone mac, and not store any information/data on the Mac itself.
At very least an FTP app, and something for opening stuffit archives would be useful.
I have a suite of software and tools that I carry on a memory stick such as FTP apps, media players and converters and such.
Im after a similar set of applications that can be run from a USB stick from anyone mac, and not store any information/data on the Mac itself.
At very least an FTP app, and something for opening stuffit archives would be useful.
Hmm...I'm not sure about storing no data on the Mac.
The mac will store everything in HD/~(user)/library/preferences
And that'll be the stuff you want to take with you!
posted by filmgeek at 7:36 PM on January 1, 2006
The mac will store everything in HD/~(user)/library/preferences
And that'll be the stuff you want to take with you!
posted by filmgeek at 7:36 PM on January 1, 2006
and stuffit needs an engine in some versions.
i'd copy packages over to the stick so you can install on the spot--too many osX apps need to write to preferences and libraries and stuff.
posted by amberglow at 8:11 PM on January 1, 2006
i'd copy packages over to the stick so you can install on the spot--too many osX apps need to write to preferences and libraries and stuff.
posted by amberglow at 8:11 PM on January 1, 2006
The mac will store everything in HD/~(user)/library/preferences
What do you mean "everything"? It will store preferences there, as the name suggests. What else?
posted by AmbroseChapel at 8:15 PM on January 1, 2006
What do you mean "everything"? It will store preferences there, as the name suggests. What else?
posted by AmbroseChapel at 8:15 PM on January 1, 2006
Well, if the poster's goal, Ambrose, is to carry say, firefox, his bookmarks will not travel.
plus, right in the post:
"and not store any information/data on the Mac itself."
posted by filmgeek at 10:05 PM on January 1, 2006
plus, right in the post:
"and not store any information/data on the Mac itself."
posted by filmgeek at 10:05 PM on January 1, 2006
don't they have sticks that hold a lot now? maybe you could make a boot disk, with apps?
posted by amberglow at 11:49 PM on January 1, 2006
posted by amberglow at 11:49 PM on January 1, 2006
you'll be lucky to get a bootable tiger image that is smaller than a gig these days.
posted by machaus at 12:55 AM on January 2, 2006
posted by machaus at 12:55 AM on January 2, 2006
One program:
Cross-Platform Portable Firefox
And a couple things you might want to try: Neither are probably ideal for what you want to do, but they're interesting nonetheless.
posted by lhl at 3:33 AM on January 2, 2006
Cross-Platform Portable Firefox
And a couple things you might want to try: Neither are probably ideal for what you want to do, but they're interesting nonetheless.
posted by lhl at 3:33 AM on January 2, 2006
I actually thought that same thing at first, that all the apps I want could be run from the stick, but I realised that the preferences etc will be stored on the Mac.
Its a 1Gb stick, but has about 300Mb taken up already (Windows apps and a secure file vault).
posted by lemonfridge at 3:35 AM on January 2, 2006
Its a 1Gb stick, but has about 300Mb taken up already (Windows apps and a secure file vault).
posted by lemonfridge at 3:35 AM on January 2, 2006
Thanks for the cross platform FireFox! I had the original portable FireFox, but it was slow and Win only. With this and the Bookmarks sync Extension life should be sweet.
Any more thoughts on FTP and stuffit software?
posted by lemonfridge at 3:41 AM on January 2, 2006
Any more thoughts on FTP and stuffit software?
posted by lemonfridge at 3:41 AM on January 2, 2006
check this out: TechTool Protege, a new Mac
OS X troubleshooting and diagnostic tool stored on a bootable 1GB Firewire-based flash drive. TechTool Protege is shipping now but will make its public debut at next week’s Macworld Expo in San Francisco. It costs $229.
posted by amberglow at 1:25 PM on January 7, 2006
OS X troubleshooting and diagnostic tool stored on a bootable 1GB Firewire-based flash drive. TechTool Protege is shipping now but will make its public debut at next week’s Macworld Expo in San Francisco. It costs $229.
posted by amberglow at 1:25 PM on January 7, 2006
This thread is closed to new comments.
There are lots of FTP applications, so I won't try (others can perhaps suggest their favorites). You'd use StuffIt Expander for StuffIt archives.
posted by xil at 7:28 PM on January 1, 2006