Submit portable freeware that you find here. It helps if you include information like description, extraction instruction, Unicode support, whether it writes to the registry, and so on.
FlashPeak wrote:Slimjet is a free web browser that is fast, secure and powerful. It's built on top of the Google Chrome browser but integrates a lot more powerful and convenient features while keeping the same fast browsing speed. Chrome is simple and fast but doesn't include enough options. Slimjet is designed to be more flexible and customizable. Here is a brief list of features built into Slimjet but not available in Chrome:
Fully customizable toolbar
QuickFill form filler
Youtube video downloader
Local Weather forecast
Automatic photo shrinking to reduce upload time
Photo enhancement before upload
Facebook integration
Flexible web page translation
Type alias instead of long URL from address
Save web page screenshot
Auto refresh control
Multiple proxy switcher with support of socks5 proxy
Upload clipboard image with a single click
Address bar typed url history dropdown
Flexible new tab control options
more...
Since Slimjet is built on top of Chrome browser, all extensions designed for Chrome in Chrome Web Store will be fully compatible with Slimjet.
FAQ wrote:Q: What is the difference between Slimjet, SlimBrowser and SlimBoat?
They are all web browser products from FlashPeak Inc but they are based on different engines. Slimjet is based on Blink engine (the engine behind Chrome from Google). SlimBrowser is based on Trident engine (the engine behind Internet Explorer from Microsoft). SlimBoat is based on the Qt-port of Webkit engine. The three browsers have a similar set of features. Slimjet is the most robust and stable of the three and is most suitable for people who prefer a simple and clean user interface. SlimBrowser is suitable for people who prefer an advanced user interface with as many options as possible. SlimBoat has the smallest memory footprint and run across multiple platforms but might have compatibility issues with a few web sites due to the QtWebkit engine. Slimjet is our top recommendation for Windows users.
FlashPeak wrote:Important Notice about the Portable Version
In the portable version, all the settings and data are stored under the folder where the portable version archive is extracted. If you are running it off a USB disk, make sure it has at least 2G free space. Also, make sure it has reasonable read/write speed. Otherwise you might feel it runs significantly slower than a hard drive installation. If you extract it on the hard disk, DO NOT extract into the program files folder under the system folder (such as c:\program files or c:\program files (x86). Extract it under your personal folder or any folder not on the system drive.
The data and settings between the regular installer version and the portable version are completely independent of each other. If you switch between the two versions, you will have to copy the data between them manually. In the portable version, all the data and settings are stored under the "User Data" within the extraction folder. In the regular version, all the data and settings are stored under the local application data folder. The path is usually like "c:\users\YourUserName\AppData\local\Slimjet\User Data" under Windows Vista or later. It is like "c:\documents and settings\YourUserName\Local Settings\Application Data\Slimjet\User Data" under Windows XP.
"Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the universe trying to build bigger and better idiots. So far, the universe is winning." - Rick Cook.
joby_toss wrote:How do you guys like the new homepage design?
I don't like the web-site design but like the browser design, Slimjet seems to be the most capable of all Chrome clones. Now Slimjet has also its own download manager (the so-called 'turbocharged download manager).
Has anyone compared the x32 and x64 versions of Slimjet? The developers recommend the x32 ones.
Unfortunately I cannot imagine a Chromium-based browser as my default one but my old pre-Australis version of Firefox is aging and is urging for a replacement but I can't think of any, especially now when Pale Moon has broken compatibility with some add-ons and is sailing away from Firefox.
I haven't made the move to x64 in any of the browsers i'm using/testing (firefox, slimjet, vivaldi).
Currently i use firefox as my main browser, and moving to a chromium-based one as my main browser is simply out of the question, as of now.
I'll suggest the usual, why don't you try the latest firefox with the Classic Theme Restorer addon?
I'm using Slimjet x64 as my secondary browser, I think for more than a year, and I can say it's hungry for RAM, but it moves flawlessly (never crashed, never froze, not one single glitch). And it's the only chromium based browser that offers the option to remove the close tab button! The most annoying "feature" of any browser, for me! I'll NEVER use a browser that doesn't give me this option!
smaragdus wrote:... my old pre-Australis version of Firefox is aging and is urging for a replacement but I can't think of any, especially now when Pale Moon has broken compatibility with some add-ons and is sailing away from Firefox.
If you could invest some time in getting the hang of K-Meleon, you'd be able to linger in Mozillaland...