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Showing 3 open source projects for "portable apps"

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  • Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas Icon
    Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas

    The database for AI-powered applications.

    MongoDB Atlas is the developer-friendly database used to build, scale, and run gen AI and LLM-powered apps—without needing a separate vector database. Atlas offers built-in vector search, global availability across 115+ regions, and flexible document modeling. Start building AI apps faster, all in one place.
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  • Point of Sale. Powerful and Simple. Icon
    Point of Sale. Powerful and Simple.

    For retail store owners and multi-location retail operations needing a tool to manage sales, inventory, staff and channels in one place

    Vibe Retail is an all-in-one retail point-of-sale and operations platform built for single-store and multi-location retailers seeking to unify inventory, sales, staff and customer data from one mobile-friendly interface. The system lets you track inventory across locations and warehouses, handle item variations (size, color, material), manage purchase orders and supplier deliveries, print custom barcodes, and transfer stock between stores in real time. On the sales side, Vibe supports multiple payment types (cards, cash, checks, gift cards, EBT), layaway workflows, serial number tracking, delivery management, loyalty programs and branded receipts. Retailers can integrate with online platforms (such as Shopify and WooCommerce), sync in-store and online sales, access 40+ real-time reports on sales, inventory and performance, set up promotions and discounts, and print receipts from mobile devices.
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  • 1
    Scoop Main

    Scoop Main

    The default bucket for Scoop

    Scoop’s Main bucket is the primary, default repository (“bucket”) of application manifests for the Scoop package manager on Windows. It holds a curated set of portable or minimally invasive applications that adhere to Scoop’s standards (i.e. apps that don’t heavily depend on installer frameworks or registry tweaks). When a user installs Scoop, the Main bucket is automatically configured, so users can immediately install common command-line tools and utilities without adding extra buckets. The manifests in Main are JSON files that describe how to download, install, uninstall, and manage versions of apps (including dependencies, checksums, etc.). ...
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Scoop Installer

    Scoop Installer

    A command-line installer for Windows

    ...If you have built software that you would like others to use, Scoop is an alternative to building an installer (like MSI or InnoSetup). You just need to compress your app to a .zip file and provide a JSON manifest that describes how to install it. Scoop downloads and manages packages in a portable way, keeping them neatly isolated in ~\scoop. It won't install files outside its home, and you can place a Scoop installation wherever you like. For terminal applications, Scoop creates shims, a kind of command-line shortcut, inside the ~\scoop\shims folder, which is accessible in the PATH. For graphical applications, Scoop creates program shortcuts in a dedicated Start menu folder, called 'Scoop Apps'. ...
    Downloads: 40 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    Bloatbox

    Bloatbox

    Remove Bloatwares from Windows 10

    BloatBox is a lightweight toolkit that helps users identify and remove unnecessary or undesired components from Windows installations. It typically exposes a curated list of preinstalled apps and services often considered “bloat” and offers scripted ways to uninstall or disable them, streamlining a system for performance, privacy, or reduced clutter. The project aims to be user-friendly: rather than running raw command lines, it organizes actions into named tasks and explains consequences so...
    Downloads: 6 This Week
    Last Update:
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