Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Freeware, Browsers
How to make Firefox Portable your default web browser
Your default web browser in Windows is the one that opens any time you click a link to open a web page, open an HTML file, or take any other number of actions that would require a browser to load. It's typically pretty easy to make a browser your default. When you run Internet Explorer, Firefox, Google Chrome, or Opera for the first time, odds are the browser will ask if you want to make it your default.Things get a little more tricky when you start using portable browsers. These are browser that you can run without actually installing them to your computer. They don't write any data to your registry and all the files tend to be contained within a single folder which you can run from your hard drive, or a removable USB Flash drive or other media. One of the most popular is Firefox Portable.
But since Firefox Portable doesn't write anything to your registry, it doesn't ask if you want to make it your default browser. That's where a little freeware tool called DefaultBrowser comes in.
We first covered this tool a couple of years ago, when it allowed you to quickly and select your default browser from a small list of web browsers. But as the folks at Freeware Genius recently noticed, DefaultBrowser added support for Firefox Portable last year. That means all you have to do to set Firefox Portable as your default is download DefaultBrowser, run it once, click Firefox Portable, and hit "apply."
You can also select other portable browsers or any web browser not included in the DefaultBrowser by selecting pretty much any executable file using the "select your web browser" setting.
If you run Firefox Portable from a USB flash drive, if the drive letter changes you will have to register the program again.
I don't know if this is a labor of love or merely the brainchild of four very gifted games designers, but Level Up is a really weird mash-up of gaming elements that you have probably never seen in a Flash game before.
Let's start with the premise itself: Groundhog Day meets Memento. The game experience revolves around 'days': you explore the world and the clock slowly ticks towards the evening. You bounce around picking up gems and talking to the denizens of 'Level Upland'. Eventually you feel tired and head back to ...
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
michael.shi said 3:07PM on 10-08-2009
XP Only!!!
Sad news for Windows 7, Vista users
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Bryan Price said 5:34PM on 10-14-2009
Windows 2003 users as well. :(
Iliyan said 4:36PM on 10-09-2009
Ever tried clicking Tools -> Options -> Advanced -> General -> Check Now ?
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Bryan Price said 5:38PM on 10-14-2009
That really doesn't work for portable versions, not the portable versions I run. If I run the .exe (that it wants to run), then it uses my current default profile, not my portable proflle, which I may want to keep as is. Now if I could get it to run the program that sets things up to run the portable .exe, that would be a different thing.