If the file got corrupted suitably during download or on your HD, it could render it unreadable. If the header got corrupted, it could be totally unrecognizable as well.
If the file got corrupted suitably during download or on your HD, it could render it unreadable. If the header got corrupted, it could be totally unrecognizable as well.
Full filename is [AonE]_Naruto_151_[E57B748F]
Doesn't say extension, but the file type is Video Clip.
File size is 1024 KB or 1.00 MB
And I have no clue what a header is.
if its only 1 mb, then its definately not a complete file. aer you sure you didn't close ur torrent soon after it started? redownload the file and let it reach 100% before you play it
I would assume that what you have in your hands is a torrent...
Go to folder options and make it show the extension of your files.
.torrent files aren't that big. A single episode torrent would be a few kilobytes. I think Assassin must be right. Although I assumed all torrent clients kept intermediate files with different file name extension, like "!ut" for utorrent, until they are finished. But maybe some clients don't.
Usually a 25 min episode would be around 200 MB, so it must not be fully downloaded, but I was sure it was fully downloaded, so I'll try again.
Extension is .avi; on the main site the link to download it is [AonE]_Naruto_151_[E57B748F].avi, sorry didn't realize this.
I use BitTorrent to download episodes, the latest version since I last checked onto bittorent.com.
By the way, I've heard that making your starting port the same as the host you're downloading from makes your downloads really fast. Just verifying if this is true; if it is, then what's the port for downloads from the main site?
Also, does changing your upload speed affect download speed?
At the time I post this, time remaining to finish download is 2 hours, which keeps changing as the speed keeps changing too. And the file is now 11 MB.
Sounds like a totally fabricated tale. And besides, more often than not you are downloading from more than one peer, and chances are they won't all have the same port in use. Ever. That being said, you aren't downloading from a host but from peers, if you use torrents.Originally Posted by Snipes
So they always say, and according to my experience it's mostly true. Some really well seeded torrents produce high speeds with practically no upload, but that's mainly because there aren't many leechers downloading, only seeders.Originally Posted by Snipes
Personally I get frustrated and annoyed if I only get high download without equally high upload (or higher preferably). I hate to keep the torrents running forever after getting the download home. I prefer to have a good ratio already right when the thing is finished downloading.