For example, torrents now take ages to start downloading and seeding. The whole things seems to have slowed down a lot, but as my ISP has doubled my speed and put me on fibre, I would have thought it should not do that.
Red seeding means one or more trackers is not working/offline. A tracker being offline can either be temporary or permanent.Unless the torrent is private, trackers aren't really necessary. Also, a well seeded torrent will start/download just as quick with no trackers.Anyway, if you find the red seeding status annoying, you can simply remove any/all of the none working trackers by right-clicking on an offending tracker>Remove Tracker.
Red Utorrent Download
Tanx for the response, but I wasn't in time to find it out. Although I have my scheduler set to download ONLY from 12Am to 7Am, somehow THAT same torrent shown in the picture was completed out of the scheduled time.
UTorrent is a small, easy-to-use BitTorrent client that allows you to download and upload torrent to your computer. The UTorrent client interface is designed to be easy to read and allows you to check on the status of downloads and uploads at a glance. Colour codes and status icons are used to indicate the status of your torrents and files.
UTorrent uses different icons to indicate the status of a downloading torrent. Downloading torrents are indicated by a coloured square with a white arrow pointing down. If the square is red, the indicated torrent is downloading but there is a tracking error that needs to be resolved. If the square is purple, the indicated torrent is queued to download but has not begun downloading yet. If the square is blue, the indicated torrent is currently downloading.
A stopped torrent that is partially downloaded is marked with a purple square containing a white circle. Files in this torrent may not be readable until the download is complete. A stopped torrent that is fully downloaded is marked with a green square containing a white check. Files in this torrent are downloaded on your computer and fully accessible. A torrent that is paused is marked by a yellow square with two vertical white bars. A torrent marked by a red square with a white "X" contains an error and may not be readable by your computer.
Selecting a torrent in your queue and clicking on the "Files" tab will display all the files contained within that torrent. Files are colour coded by their progress bars in the "Pieces" column. A white bar indicates that the file data is available but has not been downloaded to your computer. A green bar indicates that the file data is being downloaded but is not written to your computer. A blue bar indicates that the file data is downloaded and written to your computer. A red bar indicates that the file data is not available and cannot be downloaded. Files with red bars will not be readable on your computer until the data becomes available and is downloaded.
RHN / the Red Hat customer portal supports downloads via HTTPS; it does not support downloads via bittorrent. The download service does utilise a content delivery network (CDN) which means that the actual downloads come from a server that should be close to you network-wise and offer a reasonable download speed.
Maybe we could change that and allow torrenting of our ISOs ? I mean with entitlements you get the support but providing those images faster would also be neat. I'm currently downloading at 1MB/s but with torrents , I could reach the maximum bandwidth of my own ISP.
Torrents would help tremendously. I'm downloading the iso at a ridiculous 30-40KB/s. It's only gonna take me "estimated" 3 days to download. I just hope the browser can resume the download between restarts.
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If your network router has automatic port forwarding options like UPnP (Universal Plug and Play) and NAT PMP (Network Port Mapping Protocol) available, uTorrent can take advantage of these to forward bypass firewall restrictions and connect your PC to torrent seeders and downloaders automatically.
Check with your VPN provider and, if it does offer BitTorrent-friendly servers, make sure to connect to these when using uTorrent to download or share your files. NordVPN, a popular VPN provider, labels these servers as P2P servers, for instance.
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I set a file to download proity high but it does not seem to downloading anymore and has moved onto the next file. It is red at both ends ... Will i be able to wait and get this stuff later or is it not at all aviable?
Obviously, the best solution is to change your ISP as soon as possible! You do not want to waste $70 on some 20Mb connection, if you're now only using 2 gigabytes out of your 50 gigabyte download quota. Because simply, there are a lot of other ISPs in the market who care only about the money. You as a consumer pay them $$ and they will in return provide you their service.
Before getting into the actual methods of importing a download you need to acknowledge a fact first. Many BitTorrent clients have an option (enabled by default in many of them) to add an extension (specific to that particular client) to all unfinished files. (E.g. BitComet adds the .bc! extension, uTorrent adds the .!ut extension and so on.)
Starting with version 1.20, BitComet is able to automatically import unfinished downloads of the BitComet, uTorrent and Xunlei/Thunder clients, which have their client's specific extensions appended to the unfinished files. If you intend to import any downloads from these clients, which use their specific file extension, then use Method 2 from below.
However, if your files have appended a different extension which is belonging to another unsupported client, then you will have to remove the appended extensions first, before importing the downloads into BitComet.Note:
If your torrent contains only 2-3 files you can easily do that manually.But if your torrent contains dozens or hundreds of files, then doing this manually would quickly become a REALLY tedious task and it would drive anyone insane.In order to avoid that you can download one of the many free utilities which allow you to change extensions for multiple files (such as Extension Renamer, Extension Changer, RenameIt, Renamer or use an Internet search to find a lot others) or use a batch script such as the one you can find here.
Once you got rid of the appended extensions or if your unfinished downloads didn't have any extensions appended (i.e. the previous client didn't have enabled the option to append an extension to unfinished files) you can use any of the below methods to import the downloads into BitComet.
Method 1:You will need the exact same .torrent file in order to complete those unfinished downloaded files.If you're one of those tidy persons who save all their torrents to some folder before opening them in their client then you shouldn't have much trouble finding the file.If you were a little lazier but still have the previous client installed, you may still be in luck. Look into the folder where your other client stores the .torrent files and you may still find you .torrent file in there. Especially, if your task is still present in your other client, you should definitely be able to find the .torrent file in your clients settings folder, since no BitTorrent client can run a task without having the .torrent file for it. Due to the great variety of OS/client type combinations we cannot provide for every case the exact location where your client stores the .torrent files. But usually this is somewhere either in the program directory (under XP or earlier) or in the Documents and Settings (in Windows XP) or User folders (in Vista or later) buried somewhere in the %userprofile%\AppData\ folder.
If you're unlucky enough to have lost the .torrent file from your machine, you'll have to go back to the site where you downloaded it the first time, and download it again. But make sure you download the exact same torrent (i.e. the .torrent file with the same info-hash) or you won't be able to pick up your download where it was left. Double-click the .torrent file (or drag and drop it on BitComet) and in the opening torrent properties dialog, choose the torrent's current download path to be the same as the path to the folder where your unfinished files reside (it's recommended to do a manual hash-check to ensure that BitComet acknowledges the already downloaded data, first). BitComet will start downloading from where the previous client left off. 2ff7e9595c
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