Best Bit Torrent client at the moment?

saumilsingh said:
BitComet has best speeds, but in the end when I add up the total downloaded and total remaining figures, it's wasted as much as 70-100mb, giving only an illusion of better speeds over other clients.
yes man .. i never checked that :O
for every 100 mb dl ,10 mb extra is downloaded ... but never had any problem with any tracker so far ..but i try to avoid private trackers as B#NL's upload is capped at 64 kbps :mad:
ok.. lets see ..will try utorrent ...
 
It happens on every client. Although on utorrent the overhead is 1-2% on downloads. Digital brain I hope u're using IPfilters to block bad fdata. Check if there are any hashfails in the torrent file. If there is tht means there is bad data coming to u.

AFA the caps are concerned, unless we get G.SDSL or VDSL2+ the only saviours for uploaders otherwise with ADSL2+ the downloading would be high but uploading will be highly crunched :( :mad:

There is also TI's Uni-DSL which could give a good transition from ADSL to VDSL but then AFA BSNL is concerned they wanna go the FFTH way . There were quite a few press releases saying tht. For e.g. this although no idea when things will come to frutition. Maybe we get updates in August when the IPTV service will be launched by them.
 
shirish said:
scarezebra, firstly see that DHT, peer exchange both are disabled from Options > Bittorrent . I'm using the 1.6 release hence using tht as the base.

Secondly, demonoid isn't like other trackers & updates only once in a day hence it reports something which doesn't gel with what u'r client says. The best way is to see what u'r ratio was 24 hrs. ago & then see again although I like idesir for it gives complete info. every 30 minutes with a file listing of what I've but with the recent MPAA stuff with piratebay & others most of the trackers don't wanna have such info. on their servers hence you might be feeling the same.
There is also the possibility of this happening genuinely also but in tht case u'll have to talk with the mod. there or in the forum > tracker help :) Hope this helps.

I always disable DHT and peer exchange as soon as i load the torrents...I also logout and login on the site , justto make sure that my ip gets logged in correctly.....I have been using it for the past two days...Lets see whether the problem gets solve, otherwise as u said i will have to inform the mods......Thnx for the info BTW...
 
digital_brain said:
yes.. the ip filter is enabled ... how do i know there is any hash file in the list of torrent files ?

What do u mean by hash file? or do u mean hash fail? If u mean hashfail then click on any completed or downloading torrent file. Then look in the general tab in the transfer there is a Wasted : some mb or nothing with (0 hashfails or more hashfails) this tells u how many hashfails are there.
AFA connectivity is concerned. There is another technology developed by Caltech called FAST . The technology was developed in 2k3. Here's the article about it.

National Geographic News said:
New Internet Tech 153,000 Times Faster Than Modem
National Geographic News
March 18, 2003

Scientists have developed a new data transfer protocol for the Internet fast enough to download a full-length DVD movie in less than five seconds, the California Institute of Technology said today.

The protocol is called FAST, standing for Fast Active queue management Scalable Transmission Control Protocol (TCP).

The researchers achieved a speed of 8,609 megabits per second (Mbps) by using 10 simultaneous flows of data over routed paths, the largest aggregate throughput ever accomplished in such a configuration, Caltech said in a news release. "That is 153,000 times that of today's modem and close to 6,000 times that of the common standard for ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) connections."

"The FAST protocol sustained this speed using standard packet size, stably over an extended period on shared networks in the presence of background traffic, making it adaptable for deployment on the world's high-speed production networks," Caltech said.

Harvey Newman, a professor of physics at Caltech, said the fast protocol "represents a milestone for science, for grid systems, and for the Internet."

"The ability to extract, transport, analyze and share many Terabyte-scale data collections is at the heart of the process of search and discovery for new scientific knowledge," Newman said.

Les Cottrell of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), which worked with Caltech on the experiment, said that progress in speeding up data transfers over long distances was critical to progress in various scientific endeavors. "These include sciences such as high-energy physics and nuclear physics, astronomy, global weather predictions, biology, seismology, and fusion; and industries such as aerospace, medicine, and media distribution."

"Today, these activities often are forced to share their data using literally truck or plane loads of data," Cottrell said. "Utilizing the network can dramatically reduce the delays and automate today's labor-intensive procedures."

The data was transferred over shared research networks in the presence of background traffic, suggesting that FAST can be backward compatible with the current protocol, Caltech said. The FAST team has started to work with various groups around the world to explore testing and deploying FAST TCP in communities that need multi-Gbps networking urgently.

With Internet speeds doubling roughly annually, the performances demonstrated by the new protocol could become commonly available in the next few years, Caltech said. "So the demonstration is important to set expectations, for planning, and to indicate how to utilize such speeds,"

The testbed used in the Caltech/SLAC experiment was the culmination of a multi-year effort, led by Caltech physicist Harvey Newman's group on behalf of the international high energy and nuclear physics (HENP) community, together with CERN, SLAC, Caltech Center for Advanced Computing Research (CACR), and other organizations.

The experiment was performed last November during the Supercomputing Conference in Baltimore by a team from Caltech and the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), working in partnership with the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), and the organizations DataTAG, StarLight, TeraGrid, Cisco, and Level(3).

The FAST protocol was developed in Caltech's Networking Lab, led by Steven Low, associate professor of computer science and electrical engineering. It is based on theoretical work done in collaboration with John Doyle, a professor of control and dynamical systems, electrical engineering, and bioengineering at Caltech, and Fernando Paganini, associate professor of electrical engineering at UCLA. It builds on work from a growing community of theoreticians interested in building a theoretical foundation of the Internet, an effort in which Caltech has been playing a leading role.

Source :- National Geographic News
 
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Azureus for me. Picks up speeds quick even with torrents with files more than 15gigs.

Well i have been using a program called BitLord in always worked without a hitch.

I suggest you shift to Bitcomet quick. its the same thing as Bitloard and ad-free.
 
bitcomet >> high on interface and features....

utorrent >> requires less resources.....

azureus >> untested by me but good enough acc to the reviews....

I dont think you need to scout for anything else....
 
hmm... is utorrent a definite king for the new generation of users and for that matter even the older ones...??? or is azureus gonna reign supreme?? we shall have to wait to find out ;)
 
as a member of the utorrent community also, have to say we see healthy amount of debate going there . Less infighting & more towards making some useful meaningful software. I would be the the first ones to be when they make the move to GNU/Linux.

AFA features are concerned, chic they're all there they're just hidden from the average user. Once u start to play with it, you realize there's just so much. They've taken the simplified look as they don't want the average user to know wht & how things change & u'll still wonder how many people are still stuck up. All of these guys need to work on their UI.
 
used utorrent....similar features like azureus....:)
the only thing i dont like is it checks the integrity of the downloading files everytime i start the application...the only workarnd i know is to pause & then quit the application...but i cant do such things when i schedule a shutdown..
in azureus there was a command switch to use to use that would close the opened instance of Azureus in neatly defined manner....(& woudnt need a checking of the downloading files...)
it was smthing like azureus.exe --closedown

i would be very helpful if anyone tells me is there such option in Utorrent...
I dont have any complain against utorrent..its' a blast for its' size...

Azureus is like macos & utorrent like winxp....:;):
 
started off with BC, had a small fling with u, now back with BC.The lack of a scheduler is all that troubles me tho..

Either way, DC++ is where I'm at these days :D
 
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