I just got fiber. And the higher uploads mean that uploading to cloud services works way better. And that means the service as a whole works way better. So, my guess is that online servies will become more and more tied in our everyday lives.
I am a bit of a security/privicy freak and really NOT a fan of this migration to the cloud. But it is what it is. People like it. It is a logical development and it isn't going to stop.
But there is also a bright side. Since I have a lot of bandwith (500/500) at home, I can run my own OwnCloud server. And it will work just as fast as Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive or any other professional cloud service. The same goes for hosting my own email, or anything else.
Faster broadband will make people move more and more into the cloud. But it will also give people who don't like the cloud, to do it themselves. To move away from it. It will also make sharing content among friends much easier and practical. Think about sharing stuff via Bittorrent Sync, or sharing media with Plex.
The harder the copyright agencies hit on sharing, the more peole will move to the old fashion way of sharing. Handing down external hardrives full of content, within private circles. But since broad will be abundant, physical harddrives will be replaced with shared media on private servers and PC's.
Lot of this is going on for years. More broadband will make it happen a lot more.
in an old gaming community we used to use Bittorrent Sync to share movie files, then get together at a scheduled time on our mumble server (you could also use ts3 or ventrillo). someone would give a count down and we would all start the video at a specified time and talk over the voice server. there were scheduled breaks for food/ bathroom where we would all pause and sync our times up in case someone got out of sync.
you could also rig up a multicast through VLC, but its hard and I dont have a lot of experience with it.
Well, Bittorrent the corporation is different than bittorrent the protocol that they made famous. Bittorrent is just a technology company that designed a method to share data, and I don't think they want to piss off the major networks.
Worried about privacy? Instead of Dropbox, use BTSync and just sync the folder containing your Keepass DB and Key across your devices.
I've been doing this across Windows, Mac, Linux, and Android without issue. It's been great.
No, they're not. They're both for the users of those particular clients. #bittorrent & #transmission
Discussing obtaining Linux on those channels is no more appropriate than coming into ##linux and asking for help on advice on which movie to watch, simply because you'll be watching it on Linux.
From the website:
"Your information stays yours. Sync never stores your files on servers, so they stay safe from data breaches and prying eyes."
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
The good thing about Bittorrent Sync is that it doesn't use the cloud, which means that its much harder for prying eyes to see what you are syncing. The bad thing about Bittorrent Sync is that it doesn't use the cloud, and that means that at least one device with the file you need has to be on to sync it. This also means that there's no data limit because it's whatever your devices can hold, but this also means that it's kind of a good idea to dump your files on a dedicated machine that's always connected to a connection with unlimited data. That's kinda like a cloud, but not really and you don't have to use it that way.
Edit: Which basically means that it doesn't work like a cloud and more like a stripped down easy to use FTP share over BT protocol, which is honestly all I needed in the first place.
1.) download bittorrent or an equivalent. The legality here is like how, officially, you're only supposed to use bongs for tobacco. Officially, you're only supposed to share files that you have appropriate licensing for.
2.) download a .torrent file from somewhere. Magnet sites, as they are called, are also technically allowed a lot of places, since they're not hosting the files, just acting as signposts to guide people to other people who have the file. In the places they're not allowed, it just so happens that the servers are hosted in places where those laws don't apply. careful, though. Laws still apply to the end user.
3.) add the .torrent file to your torrent client. in bittorrent, navigate to 'file>add torrent'. The .torrent file doesn't actually contain the movie/book/etc that you're trying to download, it merely serves as a sort of ID that says 'Hey, guys! I'm looking for a file, does anyone have ______?'
4.) once the file has been added, you have become part of a network of peers. At this point, if you don't have the appropriate license, you've begun breaking the law. If the downloading hasn't begun, right click on it and make it start.
5.) You should see a number labeled 'Seeds/Peers'. this tells you how many people have the file you're looking for and are willing to share parts of it with you.
6.) now, just wait for the download to complete. depending on how many seeders there are, it might take a while.
7.) once you've finished downloading the file, don't forget to seed so other people can get it.
I'd go one of two routes.
Run a Plex Server and have your parents access that. But that only works so well if you have the upload speed for it. https://plex.tv/
Also your parents would need a Plex Player, but there are a lot of options for that.
Or setup BitTorrent Sync, that can easily and privately sync the data between two computers. http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
Good point. Personally I always use port forwarding for my torrents, re: PIA that does rule out all the U.S. servers.
Other people get squeamish about PIA's port forward warning so I don't bother trying to convince anyone on it anymore. If people only want to torrent with some of the available peers in the swarm that's their call.
Fun fact: Users without an open port forward can only torrent with users that do have their port open & forwarded. These particular users cannot torrent with any other users who also decided not to forward their port. Essentially this means multiple PIA users without port forward enabled cannot torrent with eachother, or really with anyone else that didn't forward their port.
Take a look at Bittorrent Sync, I would link but I'm on mobile. It uses the Bittorrent protocol to sync a Dropbox-esque folder between clients and uses a secret to encrypt the stream. Save the trouble of a server and simply push it to every client.
I've personally set this up in an environment with about 12 computers and it worked pretty well.
Edit: Added link and spelld better.
I'm not an expert, but I will try to provide some basic information and answer any questions you have.
Terminology:
Torrent: a file that contains all the necessary information in order for you to download the desired files
Client: a program that allows you to download/share files using the BitTorrent protocol
Peer: a user running a BitTorrent client who has connected to other clients/peers
Seed(er): a peer who has completely downloaded the files and is uploading to other peers
Leech(er): someone who does not upload to other peers
BitTorrent Clients
Torrenting Sites
There many other sites, including invite-only communities, that are out there. Just search around.
What to look for when downloading:
You want to download using torrents that have a high amount of seeds. More seeds = faster downloads. You should also read any comments submitted from other users about the torrent. They can let you know about quality, reliability, viruses, etc. Obviously if the torrent doesn't look right, don't download it.
These are just the basics and there is a lot of information that you still may need to know. If you have any questions, feel free to ask!
EDIT: Check out these resources...
Bittorrent = http://www.bittorrent.com ?
It is basically the same as uTorrent, it it just rebranded due to the ownership (Bittorrent Inc.).
I would stick to qBittorrent, because whenever there are two basically equivalent applications I always prefer the free and open source one. Secondly, uTorrent / Bittorrent Inc. has had too many mishaps with malware or bitcoin miners getting in to the app in the past, so it has lost my trust.
Have a look at BitTorrent Sync maybe.
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync/download
You can sync the folder on the host machine, share the key with the other machine (pointing it to an empty folder) and it will start syncing. The actual transfer is done via P2P and works more or less like torrents, except that only you, with your key, will be able to access this particular torrent.
From their site
>Note: Keep your devices on.
>BitTorrent Sync skips the cloud to transfers data directly between your devices. To keep files up-to-date, you’ll need to leave your devices on.
Not having a central entity to 'hold' my files is a bit of a bummer...
A better alternative might be ownCloud .. where you setup ownCloud on your webhost/private server to act like dropbox.
Have a look BtSync from the creators of Bit Torrent. It works in the exact same way dropbox would, you designate a folder on your computers to be 'synced' then any modifications to that folder are then shared with all other devices connected (Lan & Internet).
One word of warning it is in Beta so occasionally you will get a file that does not sync properly... This happens most often when you change time zones with a laptop or saving a file frequently (Like once every 5 mins or so).
I've been giving Bittorrent Sync a shot and I'm finding it very good for what it is.
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
No actual cloud service can be a pretty big limitation though depending on your use case and I've found the RAM usage to be noticeably higher than the Dropbox client at present.
Worth checking out at least. Wish it was open source.
Check out the new product released by BitTorrent here. It allows you to send large files through the web like this. Not sure how long 500GB will take though, unless you have an incredible connection on both ends.
Step 1: Download torrent client like uTorrent, BitTorrent or a host of others.
Step 2: Go to Pirate Bay, search for what you want, click the magnet link.
Your torrent client will give you an option to select which files you want or don't want, and where to download the files to. Pretty simple. Then it's just a matter of waiting.
I use btsync for this, you can install it on your Seedbox, laptop, and desktop. The laptop will automatically download files from your Seedbox as they appear, and also send to your desktop when powered up. Works great http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
I would start with the basics, by reading guides like this: http://www.bittorrent.com/help/manual/chapter0201
As far as VPNs go, PIA is one often recommended here on reddit: https://www.privateinternetaccess.com
As a fellow Mac user, I recommend Transmission, as far as clients go: http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/19378/transmission
Try Bitorrent Sync for copying in the local network and to your house!
Its true, people don't have an excuse for not backing up. Free online storage (up to a limit), Owncloud, cheaper Hard drives, automated backup systems etc.
Try Bittorrent Sync! This allows you to transfer large amounts of data with no limits at all. Both devices need to be active and then you can easily transfer the files needed. Its basically like dropbox but this skips the "cloud" and transfers straight from device to device. Since the cloud is skipped, there are no size limits.
If you insist on using hard drives, Format the hard drive to exFAT, this format is mac and windows compatible but without the size limitations of FAT32. You will lose all the data when formatting so its best to back that up fist (if thats an option in your case), then format and then you can put it back.
Download the program BitTorrent http://www.bittorrent.com/
Once you've done that go to piratebay.org which will forward to thepiratebay.se
Once there search workaholics season 2. try the different links and see which one has the best comments (like "Gr8 upload thx" and stuff like that)
When you find a link that seems good download the torrent
By the way I'm being serious this is all legit. I'm only assuming you don't know what torrents are that's why I'm giving you step by step. Lemme know if you have any questions.
P.S - Some ISP don't like torrents, specifically seeding, so just be aware of that.
So basically that website is just a library of torrents, you search for a specific thing you want and if they have it you can download the torrent file. To actually download what the torrents have(like an Eagles game), you need another program. I use, and recommend, BitTorrent. From there it should be pretty self explanatory, you open the file with BitTorrent and it downloads everything there.
When looking for a torrent on kickass, I'd usually check out the comments to make sure it's not like a bad file or something, also check out how many "seeders" the file has. The more seeders, the faster the download. Also, when your file finishes downloading on BitTorrent, it'll usually start seeding the file automatically(I think you can change the settings for this), so yeah just a heads up. It helps other people if you seed the file, but it also uses your upload speed so I recommend just stopping it after it finishes. If you need any help just let me know.
>TronScript in this way?
I do. 24/7 uptime. I think you have an issue with your configuration.
BYQYYECDOJPXYA2ZNUDWDN34O2GJHBM47
Make sure the settings for your Sync folder look like this (or this on v1.3.x).
Make sure your configuration is correct and post some screenshots.
Hmmm I think I understand even less than I thought I did. Bear with me here, but I'm using this software for Mac for whatever torrenting I do. As far as I know, it downloads the files to my Mac without any other clients? I just want to make I've got everything straight here because I don't want to be doing anything wrong with semi-risky shit like this haha.
Honestly BTSync is the best way to go. There are minor updates pushed out all the time and you will receive them immediately by using BTSync. Otherwise you'll have to wait for the new release to be posted. The read-only key is: BYQYYECDOJPXYA2ZNUDWDN34O2GJHBM47
The official URL is:
https://jailhouse.sgc-hosting.com/~bmrforg/repos/tron/
Happy to see you guys using Tron. Post here at /r/TronScript and get your guys to subscribe for updates/help. Thanks!
Using windows or mac's file sharing feature can be a bit dicey in a room full of students. To protect your computer I would recommend the use of BitTorrent Sync. As long as they have an Internet connection they should be able to access the files.
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
Anyone connected to your cloud will be able to interact with the shared files.
I'm running an AMD 5350 on a home media server I built two weeks ago. 12 GB of RAM, 1 TB internal hard drive, 2 TB external for syncing. With the case, motherboard, CPU, RAM and hard drive, it came to about $350 CAD.
I'm using it as a Samba server, a Subsonic server for my music library, and using btsync to sync around 80,000 files (300 GB) across 3 machines on my home network. I also have nginx on there and use it as a development machine for Ruby. It's running Ubuntu 14.04 Desktop with Xfce and occasionally I spin up XBMC or use VLC for media consumption at 1080p.
The processor isn't very fast. CPU sits around 15%, mostly due to btsync and the number of files it has to watch. It has about the same performance as my AMD Athlon II X4 620 that I got in 2010, with significantly less power consumption (25 watts vs. 95 watts for the 620).
I haven't really looked into comparable Intel offerings, but I imagine there's something competitive from them. It is a welcome upgrade from the Raspberry Pi I had been using for my media center prior to this machine.
No, it's not. At all.
Google Drive doesn't have de-duplication and will on a whim vanish files because some event on a different computer triggers a delete.
If you use Google Docs and save that to Google Drive it doesn't actually save a file, it saves a URL to Google Drive. So if in the future you want to open the file stored on Google Drive in a different word processing app, and haven't exported it from Docs first, you have nothing.
I had an issue where Google Drive created endless copies of copies of files. I couldn't keep up with it so I simply deleted all the files thinking I could restore them from an off line back up of the Google Drive docs files.
Nope. In deleting the files in Google Drive, Google Docs also deleted it's versions. When I copied the so called back ups back, all they did is point to empty junk in Docs.
I had copied as exported txt files so I didn't lose any data, but I learned that Google Drive cannot be trusted for anything and stopped using it outright.
Dropbox is much better, but it is still a 'cloud service' and prone to the whims of Dropbox still existing as an entity and what platforms they think is worth supporting.
If you really want to have your files present on any device, without being bound up in arbitrary size restrictions from a cloud provider, use BitTorrent Sync.
Because it works natively with the file system it supports whatever software you need.
I use it to synchronize across android, desktop, laptop and server and have found it significantly better than any 'cloud' option.
EDIT*woohoo downvotes without comment!
EDIT2* Downvotes and supercilious assholes! My lucky day!
You should look into BTsync. You can then adjust the upload speed. The more machines you have on the shared folder the faster it gets.
I use it between office and home machines.
From reading the rest of the thread, it looks like it's bad about trying to sneak bloatware onto your computer. But I personally have no idea, like I said, I've never used anything other than BitTorrent.
BtSync: http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
Better than all the alternatives, the data never leaves the devices you sync with.
Or OwnCloud (but OwnCloud requires quite a bit of setup and your own server).
Have you checked out Bittorrent Sync. Has worked flawlessly for me and my team. Win/OSX and OSX&Android apps. You could set up a central server to act as your main backup or just share files one by one with a "secret" (BTSyncs own way to sync individual files or folders).
Why did you make the torrent private? :( Isn't that kinda pointless when you include a public tracker anyway. I was gonna post the magnet link here before I discovered that.
Also if you are planning on updating this:
You could do is make use of Bittorrent Sync and make a Read Only folder with all the wallpapers. Just share the key and it gets sent to everyone with the key, all changes gets synced and its encrypted and more. You would be the only one that can make changes though.
Anyway, thanks for the collection.
> It's open source
Incorrect. It's free, but it is not open sourced. Technically you aren't allowed to use BitTorrent Sync for commercial purposes. Of course since data is all peer-to-peer it'd be hard to catch you, but make no mistakes: this is not open source, and using the software in this way is technically a violation of the EULA.
I have a NAS. The QNAP TS-859. However, it's getting full, and lately I've tried using a less centralized option using BTSync.
So, BitTorrent Sync uses the BitTorrent protocol, but it's private. In a nutshell, it's like using Dropbox or Google Drive, but there's no third party entity hosting anything. So you are your own cloud, which also means you're responsible for your data to be redundantly stored.
Without BTSync, storing things redundantly is kind of the annoying part. If you just have an external drive, you have to remember to plug it in, keep all files in sync by hand, etc.
My setup is that I bought a bunch of 4TB drives and connected one to each of my machines. Two desktops, a laptop (that doesn't always have the drive plugged in), and a media center pc. And then I just have it set up to sync that directory across all those machines, or rather, across all those drives.
The neat thing is, you can also give someone readonly access, and it doesn't matter where the machines are. So, I could give my brother in Germany access and it essentially becomes an off-site backup. And that's something that's always good (and the advantage of a third party service)
In addition to that, I actually have btsync running on my NAS as well, because that's what I primarily interact with on my main desktop, and I don't really have to think about who or what syncs where, it just happens.
TL;DR If you install btsync on your machine and your wife's machine, it'll keep those files in sync across both of them.
You can use the archive but a lot of shows are not available, still its an excellent resource. For the best selection I would check out etree so you can get lossless Flac files. You will need bittorrent stable which is free. Download a couple shows from different time periods. I suggest you start with 1969-72, 74, 77, 80, and 87-90. You will find plenty of audience shows that are not available on the archive. Look out for matrix shows too. Hunters Trix is a good place to start. Have fun building a collection!
Haha, that right there is a GPU-accelerated miner that's whacking the GPU too hard, triggering a TDR (Timeout Detection & Recovery) event, see this for more on the subject: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/display/timeout-detection-and-recovery#span-idtimeoutdetectioninthewindowsdisplaydrivermodelwddmspanspan-idtimeoutdetectioninthewindowsdisplaydrivermodelwddmspanspan-idtimeoutdetectioninthe...
I'm going to bet that you have this crap installed: http://www.bittorrent.com/
They've been known for bundling shit in the installer(s).
BTW, for NVIDIA Pascal-based GPUs (GTX 10-series cards), it's much harder to catch miners in action because that architecture introduces instruction-level pre-emption for WDDM 2.x modes, meaning that they never trigger TDRs under compute loads.
Run MalwareBytes to clean up.
Why not use the Bittorrent Sync method?
> Primary method: Mirror the BT Sync repo (get fixes/updates immediately) using the read-only key: BYQYYECDOJPXYA2ZNUDWDN34O2GJHBM47
It would be a shame if someone downloaded it here using the FREE BitTorrent client to grab the magnet link and watch the episode over and over again to spite them.
Here you go. This is clearly a non-Free license. The BitTorrent Sync Wikipedia entry also classifies it as proprietary software.
I use BitTorrent Sync for a lot of my file sharing. It's free with no adds and easy to use and share. Thee 24 tools just seem overkill and unnecessary. It all goes on a case by case basis when it comes to these sorts of things. But BitTorrent Sync is great since you are working peer-to-peer and not having to rely on things like Google Drive and other Cloud Based programs out there that limit your space.
You can but you have to find a means of 'side-loading' the APKs. One way or another you have to get hold of the actual APK file and get it on your Blackphone.
One way I do it, is I use Raccoon on a PC to download the APKs to a folder. Then I have that folder auto-sync to my phone with BT Sync. I then open the APK file from within the BT Sync client on my phone and voila!
Also note that other app stores besides Play do work natively on the Blackphone, such as Amazon or F-Droid. F-Droid only has open-source apps, but Amazon offers a lot of the same apps that the Play store does.
We are using BTSync as a private cloud for our members/admins. So they can stay up to date with our big StarCraft "Member Package".
I am willing to share it with you. Will send an one time key if you want. Message me please, I created a new account and I don't know when but definitely that I will come back here.
gl hf gg!
You can certainly transfer data to your own devices using torrents if you wanted. (e.g. public trackers w/ the private flag set, unless you're OK w/ those files being published to the rest of the public)
In fact, using torrents to transfer data between devices is what Bittorrent's Sync already does.
It would only be illegal if you're not allowed to copy that data to other devices ~~ir~~regardless of torrents.
EDIT: Correction
BitTorrent Sync is the best option imo (watch the video). It allows the original seed to update the files whenever they chose and has the ability to give everyone else a read only key to download the torrent (meaning others cant change it). It will update every ones files in the background running as a desktop app. It is avaliable on all major devices.
Bittorrent sync already accomplishes as much, but huzzah for consumer choices!
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
In all seriousness, the more choices there are for serverless, peer to peer, encrypted file syncronization, the less likely any one software exploit will be to compromise privacy at scale.
Take a look at Bittorrent Sync. With it you can sync files from as many computers as you want and in custom directories. It works on iphones and androids too. It's completely automatic so long as they're on the internet at the same time. It directly syncs your stuff as it doesn't store anything on other peoples servers, and is encrypted. I use it to sync pictures from my phone to my computers, my desktops, other directories, and share things with other people. It's fantastic. I ditched Dropbox completely last year for it.
I use bittorrent sync because it doesn't hit any 3rd party servers. I don't sync advancedsettings.xml or stuff that would be in mysql but anything else gets synced to every machine including to my backend that holds my videos and the mysql server. I also sync the install files because I use all osx machines and want to make sure I'm always using the same version everywhere.
Only 7 DeployStudio servers? I've got 15. :-P
Mine are set up with master/replica, but I just rolled out BTSync to them a couple weeks ago and use it to copy new netboot images around. I'm looking for other ways to leverage it to make my life easier.
You might consider using it to sync a copy of your master DeployStudio folder to a "staging" folder on each of the remote servers, and then use a launchd item or just manually run a script to stop the DS service, sync the staging folder to the actual local DeployStudio folder, and then restart the DS service on each server.
Guinea Pig it is then.
[Download] > Bittorrent Sync.
This is the passcode/'secret' for .rar files of the most up to date mods in the PA repo:
ARED2TGQRLFIKW6BFYQ3HTIHC4DCJLLL5
Could you try syncing this to your computer? It's all .rar files so you'll need to extract them into your Arma 3 steam folder. I'll see if I can brew up a custom shortcut that launches with all these mods enabled in a short while, so you don't need to enable them through Arma itself.
I'll also try to keep this up to date whenever new mods get added. But getting SlickUpdater to work is obviously preferable.
I use Cubby (https://www.cubby.com/). It's good and reliable, also offers cloud space, but it's not free.
Then there's Bittorrent Sync (http://www.bittorrent.com/sync). It requires two computers being online at the same time though.
If you have your own server somewhere, there's FTPbox (http://ftpbox.org/). I tried the beta, was not working smoothly, have no idea about current state.
Why not try bitsync it will run on android I know that and any pc you load it onto. But I also thought that Dropbox would only be ten dollars a month for what you want to use it for.
There are two things to need to torrent, the client and the website.
The client downloads things for you, the website finds the things you want to download. Get the client first, this one works just fine.
After you download that, you'll need to find a website to find the files you want to download. This site is really good. Just click the search bar and type in a song you want. You'll notice some links have skulls beside them, that means that someone who is trusted uploaded that. Some bad people on the internet upload things to hurt you, usually people with skulls don't do that. After you find a song you'd like, click on it and it'll bring you to the file page. Click the "Get this torrent" button with the magnet beside it. It should open up BitTorrent automatically and start downloading. Hope I was helpful.
At the end you'll end up with a song file, you can stuff these all in a folder and play them, or drag them into your iTunes and play them from there.
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
Creates a private cloud of your own devices without needing a central server. I use it on my desktop, laptop and android to sync music and files regardless of the network I'm connected to.
How do you mean the initial source? Is the link to the file dead? I was not aware if it is.
The filename is
protsyk.7z
MD5SUM
8f1d0501c4bfe83f9da5b1a56e6d7bac protsyk.7z
it is also up on BitTorrentSync [BHTGLBZWHPXAUP6LTYNB3PFMNNWF26FAL]
Or do you mean who put it up in the first instance? F-knows and I doubt we ever will. Same with the leaked Nuden/Pyatt call. Sure could be the Russians, why not? Doesn't make it any less real of course.
I under the impression everyone was able to look at the .doc .ppt and .htm files are they not? Like I said before I find the effort gone to in making 87 emails look consistent with proper mail headers and encoding seems above and beyond what I expect with a hoax. Then I look at all the documents attached and I see 34 .doc files, 4 .ppt files, 1 docx file, 8 .txt files, 3 .pdf and 1 .htm file. That is quite a lot to fake complete with metadata and time stamps.
So yes.. I am still looking for further help to find real discrepancies in the content if I cannot find it in the metadata
Yes I do. As long as you have PIA installed and connected to any server (I usually pick the one geographically closest to me) you can use any torrent client you like (uTorrent isn't as popular as it used to be, I believe bittorrent is the most popular at this time).
All that anyone will be able to see is the VPN's IP address which, if you're using PIA, is shared with other users and there are absolutely no logs so it can't be traced back to you.
It's not quite the same, but BitTorrent Sync. The code is not (yet) open-source, so its security is an open question (but seems good). I use it for everything that doesn't need to be on Dropbox (e.g., for syncing up with apps).
You can use it like Dropbox, actually, if you are willing to spend the money to keep an Amazon server instance running (or set up your own). I put together a guide to setting this up on Amazon, although I'm not currently using it, since I have a desktop at home that is always on.
I've been using BitTorrent Sync for this type of thing lately. Not sure if it will be any better for you, but it's been working great for me.
If you want to have an off- (or even on-) site backup, it might be worth using something like BitTorrent Sync to mirror data to another machine since it's free and unlimited. I'm using this to keep an off-site backup of my files on a computer at my parents' house a few hundred miles away. It only cost me the price of a hard drive to stick in an old computer I already had lying around, so this might be something for you to consider if cost is an issue.
Free
Unlimited
No servers, peer-to-peer all the way.
Also, Box.net currently have a promo on that gives you 50GB free if you sign up on an iOS device.
It's just so surpising. Anyway, let me help you.
Programs you can use: Bittorrent and µTorrent
and you download torrents from: The Pirate Bay!.
yay.
Go here first and download torrent program. http://www.bittorrent.com
You need a mounting program to fully install the torrent, then once morrowind is installed, you can use the disc to run it. To get the mounting program, go here: http://download.cnet.com/Virtual-CloneDrive/3000-20432_4-173879.html
Once you installed the mounting program, go here and download this morrowind torrent: http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/3843282/Morrowind_Game_of_the_Year_Edition (be sure to hit the "download this torrent" tab on the page, any other links that say "download" are just advertisements.)
Once downloaded, right click the morrowind.iso file the go to "Mount" then install. after that you can unistall the mounting and torrent programs, unless you plan on using it again.
It sounds complicated, but it does beat paying $20.
Your network might be throttling try a proxy with peer blocker. It's a pain but if they're blocking torrent sites proxy might get you through, peer blocker is for the download so your isp won't know what you are downloading. Also read this http://www.bittorrent.com/btusers/guides/bittorrent-connection-guide
http://www.bittorrent.com/btusers/guides/beginners-guide provides a good overview of everything.
As other users have said though, torrenting copyrighted material is illegal and so you take a risk by using it. There are ways to mitigate your risk, but some googling should do you well and if you aren't willing to do that you probably shouldn't be messing with it.
>“More than 100 million users soon will have the opportunity to be part of a boundary-free internet that supports personal privacy and connection around the world.”
and then
>BTT will be exclusively available to non-U.S. accounts on Binance Launchpad, the token sale platform, by leading cryptocurrency exchange Binance on January 28th, 2019, 7 AM PST.
​
So it's boundary free, except US citizens are not allowed to buy them. Ridiculous...
Is that in the US or elsewhere?
Because the problem here is just how damn big the US is and getting old lines replaced.
I don't like defending shitty companies. However on this one issues I will agree with them in a messed up sort of way. It's literally not worth it for the companies to replace the old copper lines if they're not running fiber now.
So they need to stop being cheap asses and build up a wireless 4G mesh system or run fiber.
Putting Squid on their Cable Modem combo units & allowing us a USB port to plug a flash drive into as a cache would be pretty damn beneficial.
Don't even get me started on the lack of using tech like BitTorrent DNA.
You don't have antivirus software?
uTorrent is what the official Bittorrent client is built from and allows you to turn the ads off from the settings. It's not intuitive to disable them but a google search will let you find out how. I'm not sure about the streaming or converting though.
Deluge is probably the fastest torrent client and hasn't ever had ads.
Si yo también puedo descargar torrents con axtel de cualquier página pero el problema fue al tratar de entrar a http://www.bittorrent.com/ o http://www.utorrent.com/ y tratar de descargar el cliente (programa) para bajar los torrents
So we'll need about 3GB, if you still do then download this operating system onto your extra computer through Bit Torrent or some other Torrenting application, like Utorrent and so forth. So far you need a USB with 3GB+ that's empty, you also need a computer, and a torrent application that will be downloading the new Operating System Installation ISO (windows 10) onto your computer (not usb drive).
Just to see, if you use a similar client such as http://www.bittorrent.com/ do you see the same issue? Or is it limited to uTorrent?
FWIW, I upgraded from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10 and haven't noticed any issues myself with uTorrent speeds performing differently.
After more searching and digging, I found ripping dvds to my hard drive too difficult and time consuming.
Instead, I would consider using https://yts.re/ and http://www.bittorrent.com/ to find torrents and download them.
I understand this logic, and yes, bitcoind and bitcoin-qt are client software that communicate with and on the bitcoin network using the bitcoin protocol, but that client software is called "Bitcoin core". As another example similar to this, can you install BitTorrent? Yes, http://www.bittorrent.com.
This is just semantics, and I'm happy to agree to disagree. The original implementation of the software is called the same thing as the technology itself. In the future I would expect installing bitcoin to mean installing any compatible node software.
Oh I wish I could get it for free but I doubt their company is large enough to benefit from free advertising, especially at a such "small" community as /r/CarAV.
This head unit has been so much fun so far! I'm currently setting up BT Sync on it and a 128 GB USB drive so it can sync my entire music library and keep it updated over WiFi. I definitely need to make a new post about the fun stuff, maybe record some video as well so you can actually see how it is to use.
There are apps for Windows, Mac, Android, iOS, Kindle. What it does is sync folders across yours or others' various devices. It can do it over the internet or your network. There's even an option to only sync on your network.
I've got this baby hooked up. Static IP did the trick. Have some questions.
You could use BitTorrent Sync, it will work within a LAN environment without hitting the Internet (I think):
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync/download
BUT, you'll still have to delete the old files from your SD card at some point.
If that's how your ISP is, Cyberghost, BitTorrent, and Pirate Bay should do the trick to say FUCK NO to cable.
> nothing else I've tried comes close to the sync functionality of Dropbox.
Have you tried BitTorrent Sync? It's very very nice, has clients for all sorts of devices and you're always in control of your own data.
Why host anything on someone else's server in the first place? BTSync is peer-to-peer, encrypted, and only syncs the parts of files that have changed so after the initial sync to a new machine very little bandwidth overhead.
Thats true but, you know there is software called BitTorrent supplied by a company called BitTorrent right. It's offical name is bittorrent client, but it's called Bittorrent.
Easy.
Download and install this program : http://www.bittorrent.com/downloads/complete/os/win
Once that is installed, with magnet links. Which is what I have posted in the last message. You open them with that program and it downloads it for you.
Once the download is completed and the status bar says Seeding. Right click it and hit stop. Now you wont also be uploading.
When you do open the link, the program will open. Then you can select where you want to download it to.
A more detailed video on how to use Bittorrent, but in this case he uses a movie as an example.
Have you considered using BTSync? It works the same way as Dropbox: everything in a specific folder is synced across devices. Except there isn't a server, it's just your computers and their hard drives syncing via Peer-To-Peer.
I made you a little pro/cons list:
Pro:
Cons:
I don't know how to make a torrent, but if you set up Bittorrent Sync and enter the secret at the bottom, you can download it. Although, I can only upload at 20kb/s and my internet has been shitting out a bit lately so it'll take a while. Plus I'm probably going to play some TF2 or Dota tonight so I'll pause it for that since my ping is bad enough already. Better than nothing though!
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Setup backup with BTSync/Bittorrent Sync, then setup any machine or multiple machines to receive the files. You can even have it sent to friends or family members machines.
There is no middle man servers so to get the files the machines need to be online at the same time.
It will send any file that enters the folder you choose to sync. (pictures, video, audio, text) I theory you can sync your whole phone and if they change anything you can see that by comparing when you get it back.
edit: Files that are deleted will be removed in sync but there is a hidden archive folder that will keep these files for a month or as long as you specify.
Edit2: I believe this will not start syncing before the files are done/stopped recording.
http://www.bittorrent.com/sync/downloads - Download links for MOST platforms that run programs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5BKtbRdwDU Security Now - Professional Opinion on the security of BTSync.
I actually use my gigantic beast of a dektop instead of a separate linux machine and I'm using the following programs 24/7:
They are configured to start as a service when the system boots and they keep going without anyone logged on.
both way sync: Yes. Single way is also possible.
Restore function: ~~No, unless one of the devices running sync takes backups of the synced folder.~~ It has apparently: .SyncTrash works like the normal recycle bin. Only does this on the computers where the file did not originate, AFAIK.
~~Not really the intended use of BitTorrent Sync. If you want to edit files simultaneously, then I suggest something like Git or another version control system. Not sure what happens if files conflict. I'll try it and edit my post when I have the answer.~~ http://www.bittorrent.com/intl/nl/help/faq/sync#faq10
EDIT: I should have kept myself up to date with the BitTorrent Sync changes. I've been using it for a while.
iCloud drive in Yosemite.
I personally just use a as drive (a hard drive plugged into my airport) and save everything there.
If you are just looking for a freebee that doesn't store stuff on the cloud http://www.bittorrent.com/sync
BitTorrent Sync is the best option imo (watch the video). It allows the original seed to update the files whenever they chose and has the ability to give everyone else a read only key to download the torrent (meaning others cant change it). It will update every ones files in the background running as a desktop app. It is avaliable on all major devices.
BitTorrent Sync is the best option imo (watch the video). It allows the original seed to update the files whenever they chose and has the ability to give everyone else a read only key to download the torrent (meaning others cant change it). It will update every ones files in the background running as a desktop app. It is avaliable on all major devices.
BitTorrent Sync is the best option imo (watch the video). It allows the original seed to update the files whenever they chose and has the ability to give everyone else a read only key to download the torrent (meaning others cant change it). It will update every ones files in the background running as a desktop app. It is avaliable on all major devices.
I agree with a lot of the other comments in here, I would also suggest they need a good backup solution. If you lock him out and he breaks something trying to bypass your security the data is still lost.
Bittorrent Sync is a decent free and secure backup program. I also like a pay one called GoodSync, and of course there are always things like Carbonite.
I download them myself to my server and use Bittorrent Sync to send them over. I give each person their own folder and use a script to create hard system links from my tv and movie directories.
Hey yall. This game is currently close to going out with an arcade edition. It's pretty much playable all around, with all the core combat mechanics. If you'd like to help test stuff, and you are on a Windows 7 PC with a nvidia GPU, you can download my build this way :
I'll be here to answer some questions!
nvidia firewall is known as a cause of high memory usage by bittorrent.
you might try to disable the cache
Bitorrentsync. Direct transfers between computers. Limited only by physical disc space and net connection. I use it to sync project folders between two computers. Great for moving massive files.