-----Original Message-----
From: Justin Aplin <jmap...@ufl.edu>
To: or-talk@freehaven.net
Sent: Thu, Oct 14, 2010 10:31 pm
Subject: Re: Tor Bundle vs. Vidalia Bundle



On Oct 14, 2010, at 9:14 AM, zzzjethro...@email2me.net wrote:


 
 hi.
 What is the difference between a Vidalia Bundle and a Tor Bundle, other than 
what I perceive as the obvious?
 One without the other? I thought they had to work together.



What they "have" to do depends on what you're trying to do. The Tor program by 
itself does the legwork of building circuits and passing data to/from the 
network. It has no GUI and acts based on settings in the torrc text file. Tor 
is available on its own in the "Expert Packages" section of the download page, 
as the only people using Tor on its own are likely bridge, relay, and exit 
operators who know what they're doing. It's not a "bundle" per se.


Vidalia is GUI program that interacts with Tor and makes its settings easier to 
handle, along with other nifty features such as viewing the network, logs, etc. 
The "Vidalia Bundle" on the download page is designed to be installed on a 
computer you'll be using Tor on regularly. That is, it isn't "portable", can't 
easily be carried with you on a USB key or CD, and doesn't come with an 
internet browser. The bundle includes Polipo, which makes funneling HTTP and 
SOCKS proxies into Tor easier and safer.


The "Tor Browser Bundle" (the bundle I assume you're talking about in your 
post) is the same set of programs, together with a locked-down version of 
Firefox, that it designed to be completely portable. You don't have to install 
it, so it's easy to carry with you on a USB key or CD. Tor, Vidalia, Polipo, 
and the customized Firefox are all seamlessly started with a single button in 
this package.


All of this information is available on the download pages and in the 
documentation, I'd recommend reading through them.


~Justin Aplin
=Thanks Justin.
Your explanation was very clear, and for someone like me, I need that. Perhaps 
you could write "directions" for others to use, as most I've read seem to be 
written only for the one writing them rather than thinking and writing for the 
one reading them!

I do appreciate it and I will continue to read the documentation as per your 
suggestion. Sure would like to help a lot more people to use Tor.

Adios

 

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