The rescue media IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro creates is an ISO file, so you'd need to use something like the free open source rufus to add it to a bootable USB stick. Most all Windows partition apps install drivers - the only exception I found & use is Partition Guru, though it's not my favorite Partition app. So if you want to be strict when it comes to the definition of "Portable", IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro simply is not. Whether you run the portable version, run the regular version without installing it, or go the full install route, IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro will add im-fre.exe & MDA_NTDRV.sys to the C:\Windows\ System32 folder - MDA_NTDRV.sys is a driver, set up to run as a service in the registry. IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro does work, but I'd want to use it over time in a variety of situations or tasks before I could recommend it, or not. And as has been already posted, the free version does work in 32 bit Windows. Once you have IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro installed, you can copy the program's folder & use it the same way as the portable version. There's really not a lot of difference between the portable version & the full free version install once it's activated - the full install adds shortcuts to Windows and uninstall related registry entries.
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