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Utorrent - The perfect software for you. | ||
Discussion by Beppo with 15 Replies.
Last Update: January 12, 2009, 9:48 am ( View Rated (1) ) | |||
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This software is called Utorrent, You can search any files / videos / music / other softwares you want with this software, Then once you find the file you want, You can download it in "Torrent" form, Then go to the software, Click file add torrent, Find the folder you saved your torrent in, Then just wait for it to be transfered to a "ZIP" file.
QUOTE (Beppo)
[ You can search any files / videos / music / other softwares you want with this software,Link: view Post: 122031
No, sir, in most countries it's forbidden to download commercial videos/music/software, except if the authors explicitly claim their sofware being a freeware.
If not, this is piracy, and it's against our forum rules.
Utorrent is good program for torrents. I use it to download and play with various distributions of Linux.
If you don't believe me, most linux distributions are available via torrents, so is openOffice, CDBurnerXP Pro, America's Army, some VMWare Images, ...
QUOTE
If you don't believe me, most linux distributions are available via torrents, so is openOffice, CDBurnerXP Pro, America's Army, some VMWare Images, ...I have downloaded all of my Linux Distributions via torrent. Its nice and quick and I help other people download they're copies at the same time.
QUOTE
uTorrent is a p2p torrent client and really a good one, small and powerful, light.. but I noticed, that if you don't limit the sharing of files or downloading it might slower your connection, I mean it will be using your bandwidth and browsing the web will be much slower for you, but thats logical though biggrin.gif If you've got good connection then it might not be a problem for you. smile.gifThis, I think is true for most P2P clients. If you share any files, you have to expect that people are going to copy them from you (in return taking your bandwidth). Same thing goes when downloading torrents, if you don't limit the upload speeds, people will take parts of the torrent file(s) for themselves, again taking bandwidth.
One thing I just thought of while writing this was that if it is illegal to share copyrighted media. Say you legally download music and have it on your computer, then a torrent client like uTorrent shares those files on the Internet, are you breaking the law or is it only illegal to download the copyrighted media?
1) you have downloaded these files using a torrent
2) you create a torrent for those files and you share this torrent.
btw, p2p clients like limewire, azureus, ... can only share the files that you allow them to share. As long as you don't share folders with copyright protected material, nothing is wrong.
It found P2P sources, and started grinding. It informed me it had a time estimate for completing the download: 3-1/2 weeks! That estimate proved academic, because it crashed after about 5 minutes. I restarted several times, and never stayed up for more than about 10 minutes.
It turns out the problem is not uTorrent, but Comcast, my broadband connection. Comcast apparently has hardware to kill Torrent connections. So if you're planning on using any Torrent software, first make sure your connection doesn't go through Comcast!
So as I said, if it would be impossible to crack the software, when most of people wouldn't be using the software and using a trial may be not to much time if you want to get into say graphics with some program.. but I guess if everyone would need to pay, software would be quite cheap, it's so expensive these days due to people who pay, pays for people who don't pay.. As I said, I can understand schools and universities, but I know that some schools and universities goes with Linux and/or Windows with open source software, in some universities you work with Open Office, in some with MS Office, in some with Blender, in some with 3DMaxs, in some with Visual Studio, in some with GCC and so on
Oh what I hate sometimes when downloading torrents, is that torrents are made to download files which would not be corrupted, but some people like to split a big file into 14 MB little files, then archive them into an archive or do a torrent out of them, but this isn't necessary anymore, when downloading through FTP in the early days, it was a good idea, to split files and later join them, but why the hell do you need to split them in a torrent
By the way, if some people has problems with downloading torrents, due to their ISP does not allow it, I think that can be overcome by pretending you're just a simple connection and it would use a standard unblocked port.
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