![portable ubuntu logo portable ubuntu Portable Ubuntu Runs Ubuntu Inside Windows [GUEST POST]](http://portableubuntu.sourceforge.net/images/portable_ubuntu.png)
Windows only: Free application Portable Ubuntu for Windows runs an entire Linux operating system as a Windows application. As if that weren’t cool enough, it’s portable, so you can carry it on your thumb drive.
Built from the same guts as the andLinux system that lets you seamlessly run Linux apps on your Windows desktop, Portable Ubuntu is a stand-alone package that runs a fairly standard (i.e. orange-colored, GNOME-based) version of the popular Ubuntu Linux distribution. It just doesn’t bother creating its own desktop, and puts all its windows inside your Windows, er, windows.![UBUNTU in windows portable ubuntu splash Portable Ubuntu Runs Ubuntu Inside Windows [GUEST POST]](http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2009/04/portable_ubuntu_splash.png)
The coolest parts about Portable Ubuntu are:
* It actually works (in most cases, on most systems).
* It fits on a (larger) thumb drive and can run entirely from it.
* It can work on, and save to, your Windows folders and files.
* It’s persistent, so changes you make and apps you install are carried around with you.
* It’s easily manageable from Windows, and works great on dual monitors.
Wanna give it a go? Grab the latest Portable Ubuntu package (about 438MB as of this writing), then double-click to unpack it to a folder. On Vista or Windows 7, you’ll have to open your command prompt as an administrator (hit Windows key, type in cmd, then right-click on the “Command Prompt” option that appears and select “Run as Administrator”); on XP, you’ll probably just have to launch a command prompt. Head to the folder where you extracted your Portable Ubuntu, and enter run_portable_ubuntu and hit Enter to launch the .bat script.
![portable ubuntu portable ubuntu3 Portable Ubuntu Runs Ubuntu Inside Windows [GUEST POST]](http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2009/04/portable_ubuntu3.png)
Your machine will whir and decompress for a while, and you’ll likely get a few prompts to “Unblock” coLinux and a few other apps’ abilities on your system. Unblock all of them, and you’ll eventually get a small, move-able menu bar on your desktop, as seen in the top screenshot. Drag this wherever it’s comfortable to keep it, and you’re on your way.
From those three pop-out menus—Applications, Places, and System—you can accomplish pretty much the same thing as any Linux user can, just without the full desktop. Launch a program, and it appears in a window that looks like any other on your Windows system. Open a file browser from “Places,” and you can get to your Windows files by heading to /mnt/C (or substitute your drive name/letter for “C”). Feel free to carry around Audacity, GIMP, or any other editing programs that lack a Windows equivalent and start getting creative with them.
via [LifeHacker] Guest Post


April 19th, 2009 at 7:59 PM
wow , It sounds to me good,But
I have Q: is it working As OS or program facilitating programs working on linux( a big ?)
Downloading . . . . . .
April 21st, 2009 at 6:12 PM
It’s a full Ubuntu edition, instead of using GTK or KDE it uses windows interface to draw forms and windows.
May 18th, 2009 at 5:49 AM
Wissam, I wish to try Unbuntu but unable to download 438MB, it will eat a lot of time.
You where i can get a free full copy of Unbuntu here in Tripoli?
thanks,
May 18th, 2009 at 5:50 AM
Wissam, I wish to try Unbuntu but unable to download 438MB, it will eat a lot of time.
Do know where i can get the free full copy of Unbuntu here in Tripoli?
thanks,
May 18th, 2009 at 10:35 AM
Read this:
http://www.technolibya.com/uncategorized/get-free-linux-cds-in-libya.html
or simply buy a copy from Sook al dahra.