


So the actual use for such software being portable will be very limited to some very seldom operations, installing drivers first, then run the program, then uninstall all drivers again. Partitioning flash drives is also kind of problematic, since current operating system are not used to deal with partitioned flash drives.Īs many such products want suggest you all partitioning can be done from windows, it is just advertising, it simply can not be done. Then the use of partitioning will require sooner or later a reboot anyway, no way around that. So how to use it portable? In portable use you will seldom find a computer with admin rights open and if you find it, you better do not put your stick into it. You can not install drivers just like that, you need admin access. some people ask for having portable mail server or similar things.Īll utilities operating at level bellow operating system, will need access to such level and so can not be made portable. If you're own computing experience is limited, please think wider about the possible peoples use (not only might be always some very special case for this and that software being portable, e.g. So please don't just consider YOUR point-of-view and experience. But the EASEUS drivers don't allow us to do so while it's so easy with concurrent softwares such as the great Paragon apps. I've bought VMware ThinApp to make this kind of app easily portable, or I build portable apps myself through compiled command-line or AutoIt scripts. But what if I want to create a 2nd partition on my bootable flash drive, if I want to adjust the partitions on my data drives, or if I just want to get the freedom of using EASEUS from my USB key on others PC? (above all if I've paid one of their commercial versions) Of course, as said here, using bootable tools is the only right way to adjust system disk partitions.

I've got 4 internal HDD on my PC and several external ones too.

It's not because you can't see that it doesn't exist. "So I can not see any practical use for such app to be portable." It's been a long time since this question has been posted but I'm still wondering the same question one year later.
