Just because it’s portable doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s allowed on the organizations allow list, but it does seem highly unlikely that the organization doesn’t have any alternative text editors allowed.
But maybe they don’t edit text files often enough to bother. And honestly, notepad was recently updated with tabs which makes it a lot more usable that it used to be.
Easily replaced.
No, its not easily replaced in a locked-down enterprise setting. That’s naive.
There’s portable Notepad++, it’s great
Just because it’s portable doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s allowed on the organizations allow list, but it does seem highly unlikely that the organization doesn’t have any alternative text editors allowed.
But maybe they don’t edit text files often enough to bother. And honestly, notepad was recently updated with tabs which makes it a lot more usable that it used to be.
Portable App, “open with”, “always use this app”.
edit: right, locked down, executable whitelist?
That’s not at all practical in a large corporate IT setting.
On a large scale, you’re the guy having the rights setting things up. Obviously the Portable Apps hack is for personal use.
I suppose one might believe things were that simple if they lacked actual experience in enterprise IT.
Or perhaps you’re just not arguing in good-faith because you only care about being “right” and not about actually understanding the use case.