You're referring to a specific version of GlassWire, a popular firewall and network monitoring tool.
While the search term specifies "Portable," there is a critical technical nuance regarding GlassWire's portability: glasswire 33678 basic portable
| Limitation | Impact |
| :--- | :--- |
No Inbound Firewall Rules | Cannot block incoming attacks (e.g., EternalBlue). Only monitors/outbound blocking. |
No Driver Persistence | After ejecting the USB drive, the WFP callout is unloaded. Network monitoring stops entirely. |
SQLite DB Bloat | Continuous monitoring for 24+ hours can generate a 500MB+ database on a portable drive. |
Windows Defender False Positives | Some antivirus engines flag the portable .exe as a "hacktool" because it can bypass app control policies. | You're referring to a specific version of GlassWire,
Remote Connections: He could monitor up to three remote computers or servers simultaneously, all from the same dashboard. all from the same dashboard. Functionally
Functionally, build 33678 exemplifies the core Glasswire philosophy: visualization is the key to understanding security. While legacy tools like Wireshark offer packet-level analysis that is impenetrable to the layperson, Glasswire translates raw data into accessible graphs. The "Basic" tier focuses on the essentials: a visual bandwidth usage monitor and a firewall. This specific build provides a clear, real-time visualization of traffic volume, distinguishing between standard web browsing and anomalous data spikes. If a user notices a steady stream of upload traffic despite having no applications open, the visual graph immediately flags the anomaly. This transparency turns the abstract concept of "background data" into a tangible metric that users can act upon.
GlassWire Basic 3.3.6.78 (Portable)