Projectlibre Portable ⟶ «EXTENDED»
Yes, the portable version still requires Java Runtime Environment (JRE) to be installed on the host machine. If you’re on a locked-down PC without Java, the app won’t launch. That undermines the “portable” promise slightly. (Workaround: some users put a portable JRE on the same USB drive, but that’s fiddly.)
If you live in Gantt charts and frequently switch workstations, download this immediately. If you need cloud collaboration or a polished modern UI, look elsewhere. Would I recommend it? Yes – with the note to pre-install Java on any machine you plan to use. For the price (free) and portability, it’s a 4.4-star essential in the portable apps hall of fame. projectlibre portable
Unlike cloud tools (Asana, Trello, Smartsheet), there’s no real-time multi-user editing, no mobile app, no automated notifications. This is strictly a desktop Gantt-centric tool – fine for solo planners, less so for distributed teams. Yes, the portable version still requires Java Runtime
Icons and dialogs look like 2008. The font scaling on high-DPI screens can be wonky. It’s functional, not beautiful. (Workaround: some users put a portable JRE on
No freemium traps, no cloud subscription, no watermarks. ProjectLibre is open-source (though the portable version is packaged by the community/developer). The desktop version has been used by over 5 million people, and the portable edition carries the same full feature set. Where It Falls Short - Steeper learning curve than expected ProjectLibre assumes you understand project management concepts (critical path, resource leveling, constraints). Beginners will need a tutorial – the built-in help is sparse.