![]() I believe in providing maximum choice, y'see. The only thing I'll take credit for is putting the packages together and making them publicly available. Many of these are very much a community, team effort plenty of folks have chipped-in with ideas for improvements, snippets of code to make things work better, etc. pet package, and Puppy's native 'special', the SFS package. ![]() Many still prefer the traditional, click-to-install. It's a build-format I'm heavily invested in, simply because I truly believe it's a very good fit with the way Puppy works.not that I expect everyone to agree with me. Ya just gotta search the Forum to find 'em.there's a ton of portables for other apps which I've also built, scattered around the forum in various locations. There's also 'portable' versions available for Firefox, Firefox ESR.and even PaleMoon. Firefox WILL fire-up, but it's dreadfully 'buggy' and 'crash-prone', so.it's not really a viable proposition, TBH. I've never been able to get any of the 'clones' to function when run as a Windows 'PortableApp'. With the exception of Ungoogled-Chromium, these will ALL let you sign-in to a Google a/c. IF you look further through the 'Browsers & Internet' section, you'll find I've done portable versions for several of the Chromium-based 'clones' Iron (with updater) Slimjet Opera Ungoogled-Chromium.even a portable of the Linux build of M$ Edge. I do a 'portable' version of Linux Chrome, specially packaged for Puppy. Sorry about that, the first result of executing the way you asked was "No such file or directory." Would your last answer here still be the :. Run-as-spot /opt/palemoon/palemoon -private When you learn how to do this, you can run a newer version of Pale Moon standalone without touching the builtin version. There can be conflict when palemoon is a script in the path that does not execute the available version, which is why you may need to specify the exact location of the executable. If /opt/palemoon is a directory the command to execute an installed version of Pale Moon should be in it, even if it's read-only. Sorry about that, the first result of executing the way you asked was "No such file or directory."Īsh: exec line 4: /opt/palemoon: Permission denied Spot and private aren't necessary, but the full path might be. If you want to go to the trouble to replace that with the new version you can do so, but I got tired of doing that everytime I updated so now I just leave the original as it is.Ĭode: Select all run-as-spot /opt/palemoon/palemoon -private If you launch a web browser using the puppy menu - it will use the original version. The original version (whatever it is) remains unchanged. If you want you can place an icon onto the wallpaper and provide a suitable palemoon icon. ![]() Now when you click on a html link this version of palemoon will be launched. On my system it looks like this - /root/my-applications/programs/palemoon/palemoon Scroll down to "Web Browser" and insert the path to your new palemoon installation. From your puppy menu - navigate to "Setup -> Default Applications chooser". Copy that folder to your USB stick (or wherever you want to hold programs outside of your save file)Ĥ. open the downloaded tarball - and inside you will find a folder called "palemoon". (I keep all of my programs on a separate USB stick. ![]() create a folder somewhere outside of your save folder. Select the "xz-compressed tarball" from the link shown, and choose the package to fit your system ie Download_圆4-GTK3 tarball OR Download 圆4-GTK2 tarballĢ. download the latest version of palemoon from the website. On all platforms I use Palemoon as the default browser. Hi - I don't know if this helps you - but I was a bionic32 user for a long time, then onto bionic64 and now fossapup64.
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