From http://maven.apache.org/community.html:
Being a Good Maven Citizen
The concept of a public repository
built into the core architecture of
Maven makes it necessarily
community-centric. There are a few
simple things that Maven users may do
to help keep that community thriving.
Be a Kind Public Repository User
The best thing that a user can do is
to set up their own remote repository
mirror containing the projects needed.
There are several tools to make this
simpler, such as Nexus or Archiva.
This reduces strain on the Maven
central repository, and allows new
users to get acquainted with Maven
easier and quicker. This is especially
important for power-users and
corporations. The incentive behind
this is, controlling your own servers
can give you desired level of security
and more control over uptime,
resulting in a better experience for
your users. With that said, keep the
following sentiment in mind:
DO NOT wget THE ENTIRE REPOSITORY!
Please take only the jars you need. We
understand this is may entail more
work, but grabbing all 9+ Gigs of
binaries really kills our servers.
Host a Mirror
As an extention to the previous
statement, if you have access to a
large data repository with lots of
bandwidth, please consider becomming a
mirror for the Maven central
repository.
As you can imagine, thousands of users
downloading can put quite a strain on
one server. If you wish to be a
mirror, please file a request in the
Maven Project Administration JIRA
project.
Host a Public Repository
If you have any projects that you wish
others to use, host them on your own
public repository. That way, your
users can simply add your repository
to their own project repo list, and
viola! Maven can keep you and your
users in synch, growing your user-base
due simply to its new-found ease of
use.
Maybe if you explain why you'd like to get the whole central repo in %USERPROFILE% I could provide a better answer (if you you need to go offline, there are smarter solutions than getting 9+ gigs of artifacts). But for now, I don't get the point.