- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,587
- 10,225
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Will MS ever come out with a "Portable Windows", that acts much like "Portable Apps" - they install onto a thumb drive, and you can take the entire thing with you.
This would be ideal for travelling businessmen, that might want to use a hotel computer, or something, but not the hotels software, and not have to carry their own seperate laptop with them.
This would be a wonderful addition to the Windows family.
They could still tie down the Windows license, with activation, to a specific thumbdrive, because proper thumbdrives have serial number/GUIDs. Lime Technologies' "unRAID server" does this. So it wouldn't facilitate piracy.
The flash drive could be automatically updated with a driver library when currently online with a PC, and have a hotkey upon boot, to choose to re-configure onto a new computer.
This could be a big market opportunity for Microsoft, surely there is demand for such a thing. Why won't they provide it? If anything, thumb drives get lost/stolen often, and MS could have a licensing bonanza there. People replace their thumbdrives more often than they replace their computers.
This would be ideal for travelling businessmen, that might want to use a hotel computer, or something, but not the hotels software, and not have to carry their own seperate laptop with them.
This would be a wonderful addition to the Windows family.
They could still tie down the Windows license, with activation, to a specific thumbdrive, because proper thumbdrives have serial number/GUIDs. Lime Technologies' "unRAID server" does this. So it wouldn't facilitate piracy.
The flash drive could be automatically updated with a driver library when currently online with a PC, and have a hotkey upon boot, to choose to re-configure onto a new computer.
This could be a big market opportunity for Microsoft, surely there is demand for such a thing. Why won't they provide it? If anything, thumb drives get lost/stolen often, and MS could have a licensing bonanza there. People replace their thumbdrives more often than they replace their computers.
