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Re: Duplicati

Posted: Wed Mar 11, 2015 11:12 am
by Joe
procyon wrote:So, yes, you have to use the parameter --portable-mode every time in order to have a portable Duplicati.
Thanks! And never mind, we all make mistakes like that some time or the other. :D

Re: Duplicati

Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2016 4:50 pm
by webfork
Although there hasn't been a Duplicati release in years now, there's lots of developer activity so this is far from a dead project.

Re: Duplicati

Posted: Fri Oct 13, 2017 2:32 pm
by webfork
webfork wrote:Although there hasn't been a Duplicati release in years now, there's lots of developer activity so this is far from a dead project.
New version out! Yes! http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Bac ... cati.shtml

I tried using the old system for portability by downloading the ZIP file version with a new EXE file: Duplicati.GUI.TrayIcon.exe --portable-mode

It seemed to save settings to the data folder but I didn't run an exhaustive test. As this program uses a web browser for it's program interface, it seems unlikely to qualify as stealth.

Resources: 27 megs while running, plus whatever's needed to run the web browser to interface with the server.

Re: Duplicati

Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2019 3:53 am
by Midas
Topic update: Duplicati now has its own website at https://www.duplicati.com/. Acording to the download page, the latest release is Beta v2.0.45, dated 2018-11-28 (no global changelog; for release changes, see https://github.com/duplicati/duplicati/releases or https://forum.duplicati.com/c/releases).

There's a download link on the new homepage for v1.3.4, marked as "not supported", pointing to the old site, where the download link then silently fails.

Incidently, that last link points back to the same server providing more recent versions (https://updates.duplicati.com/beta/ and https://updates.duplicati.com/canary/), but any link pointing to http://updates.duplicati.com/1.3.x/ is dead, so it looks like the site maintainers either deleted or moved the old versions.

The WayBackMachine didn't keep the download either so, for now, Softpedia looks like the best source -- as noted by appsuser: