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P2P Software for the Mac?

NeptalTim asks: "I've recently started using the Mac as my primary computer again after a hiatus of several years. All 'switch' jokes aside, I'm liking it very much, except for the decided lack of good P2P software. I always used Kazaa on Windows, but the best app I've found for the Mac is Limewire, which is a tad slow to say the least. What do Slashdot readers in the Mac community use for P2P?" I've been using iSwipe for a short amount of time and have found it useful. It's no WinMX, but it works. What other P2P programs have you found that you like?

14 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. Acquisition by Randar+the+Lava+Liza · · Score: 5, Informative

    Acquisition is great! Supports all the new gnutella updates such as ultrapeers. Much faster than Limewire, much nicer looking, and I've had better results with it as well.

    Neo is a shadow client to Kazaa. It unfortunately doesn't actually log you into Kazaa, but rather is used to query ranges of IP's looking for Kazaa clients. It then sends searches to these clients directly, rather than to the nodes. Still, it can be very useful.

    --
    Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. - Anais Nin
    1. Re:Acquisition by TiMac · · Score: 5, Informative
      Ditto this. I use both Acquisition and Neo for P2P services. I still want a Blubster client and a REAL Kazaa client would be nice...but these two apps together serve the purposes very well.

      Also, there is a Hotline Client for OS X, and Carracho is exclusively Mac (but similar to Hotline), and there is now a NeoModus Direct Connect client for OS X--if you prefer this model of sharing.

      --

  2. Try Neo, a kazaa shadow client by chadlong · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is an interesting sourcefourge project called Neo that is a kazaa shadow client. From the homepage:
    What exactly is Neo? Neo is a Cocoa shadow client for the Kazaa network, written exclusively for MacOS X. Neo is not a real Kazaa client, and never will be; the company in charge of the FastTrack (Kazaa) network won't allow third parties access to their encrypted protocol. So what is a shadow client then? Instead of connecting to the nextwork, Neo scans through IP ranges looking for Kazaa hosts, indexes their file list, and stores them locally on your hard drive. Then, when you search for files, only the files that you have indexed on your hard drive will be searched.
    I've used it a couple of times and it seems to work well once you download a sufficiently large number of host from the master list.

  3. MacSlash just asked the same question by pikester · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check the results of the article there.

  4. For legal to own and trade music, try Furthurnet by mactari · · Score: 3, Informative

    Furthurnet is probably my favorite that runs on OS X. Bands that allow taping (and they're more numerous than you'd think. Phish, The Dead, and The Black Crowes are there, but so is everything from Louis Armstrong to the Beasties) are traded freely on this app, and I've grabbed more than 35 gigs of tunes. Most serious traders use Shorten format (.shn), which is a lossless compression format that brings that patch from the soundboard right down onto your Mac's hard drive, no questions asked. You can translate these into aiff or wav files pretty easily, and burn CDs right from iTunes.

    Furthurnet's UI and search protocol (borrowed originally from Gnutella, I believe) could use a little spiffing up, but it's a GPL'd, ad-free application that works great once you're used to it. I haven't gotten online yet and failed to find at least one show within a few minutes of searching for whatever artist strikes my fancy (though admittedly Doc Watson is about as esoteric as I get).

    Course if you're just looking for warez, I haven't helped at all, but if you want some great tunes for free via your new-found love of the Mac, you can't get any better than Furthurnet.

    "PS" If Limewire is running too slowly, it might be a "Java problem". Make sure your app has an Aqua look & feel to take advantage of Apple's JVM's hardware accelerated GUI widgets. Having a video card that supports Quartz Extreme would help a bit as well.

    "PPSS" In what little spare time I find I have (when I'm not writing this post), I've been trying to port Furthurnet to Mac OS 9-. Had some luck, but nothing to release just yet. So if you're not using OS X, upgrade. :^D

    --

    It's all 0s and 1s. Or it's not.
  5. So many to choose from... by xenofalcon · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've found LimeWire to be way too unstable--it can't handle too many files, and it's slow. However, it does manage to connect to other peers better than other software that I've sampled.

    Acquisition is a neat idea, but it doesn't work too well. Not much of an interface, either.

    MacPhex is cool, and I like its interface. It crashes on me whenever I try to change the port that it listens on, and it hasn't been able to hold a connection well.

    iSwipe is okay if you're searching, but I wasn't able to download some songs from OpenNap when I tried--I don't think it has a very good grasp of the protocol. It also limits you to sharing only 100 files on Gnutella.

    I do like Drumbeat X, although that's OpenNap-only, and you have to pay for it. It's kind of slow (only when you're sharing many files), but it works well.

  6. Direct Connect by sebi · · Score: 5, Informative

    It seems like this one has been out on the windows side of the computing world for quite some time. The OSX client is pretty new, but it is really nice. You connect to a chat room or hub and can then search download from the other participants in that room. There are not to many mac rooms at the moment, but media content is plattform agnostic anyway. Get it at www.neo-modus.com

    And I know that you shouldn't steal music. Up until now I never did. But I happen to own an iPod and it really pisses me off, when I can't put the music from a legally obtained cd on it just because some record companies think that they are funny. Copy protection won't stop me from stealing music - it will me get started.

  7. Xnap by dont_stand_so_close_ · · Score: 4, Informative

    Like WinMX but Mac OS X..

    Written in Java, and Fast, But not the most stable.

    You can find it here:

    http://xnap.sourceforge.net/

    --
    Silence Bossy Meat Creatures!
    1. Re:Xnap by usfGPM · · Score: 4, Informative

      I second Xnap. I just started using it about a week ago and have been very happy with the results so far. Acquisition is still one of my favorites, too.

      I recently tried out the (new?) edonkey client for OS X called mldonkey. Check it out at http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/mldonkey/. There are some mac specific things for edonkey at http://homepage.mac.com/michelmoreau.

      good luck.

  8. There's a thread on this at Mac Achaia by megabulk3000 · · Score: 3, Informative

    People are discussing this over at Ars Technica, here.

  9. mldonkey is very good by noisebrain · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've had very good luck with mldonkey.

    It has a lot of files that are not on limewire and it downloads very reliably. It downloads from multiple clients at the same time. If the remote side disconnects it saves state and picks up later when the file reappears somewhere else - this is perhaps it's best feature.

    Sometimes (if a large/rare file) it takes a long time to download, like days, but after seeing this work you get used to it and consider it as a real background activity. Check back in a couple days, it's magically there.

    There are several interfaces. I'm using the web interface, which is fine but took some figuring out.

    It also requires a bit of unix skills to install (first install fink, then symbolically link /usr/local/lib/libdl.dylib -> /sw/lib/libdl.0.dylib)

    1. Re:mldonkey is very good by Echnin · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mod parent up. Mldonkey is a client for the eDonkey network, which is really good. There are also compiled OS X binaries available. It's not as good as the windows client eMule, though (hoping for a Mac OS port soon!).

      --
      Lalala
  10. Mac P2P Software List by Genesishep · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no shortage of P2P file sharing clients for the Mac. In fact one of the first clients was Mac only for some time (Hotline). This is a short OS X only list.

    Gnutella Clients: MacPhex, Mactella, Limewire, Fern, Acquisition (one of my favorites). iSwipe

    Kazaa client: Neo (not a full client but it works)

    Napster/OpenNap clients: XNap, also iSwipe

    Hotline Clients: Frogblast, HotCocoa, Pitbull Pro, Zombie, FineLine, Heidrun, iSwipe(again), Ripcord.

    Others:

    KDX (a new and really very nice Mac/Win compatible P2P server/client. Great if you can ignore the immaturity of it's developers.

    Carracho: A Mac only P2P client/server. Works very well.

    Direct Connect: DirectConnect, Java DirectConnect

    There are a ton of other options that I'm not listing but to be honest I could be here for a lot longer and "It's a Wonderful Life" is on....so Happy Holidays and happy downloading.

    =^Genesis^=

    --
    "Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect."
  11. Overnet by humina · · Score: 2, Informative

    Overnet released their command line client for the mac. It is great. If you do not fear the terminal, then use Overnet. Overnet is compatible with the edonkey dllinks. You can find the available files with their corresponding links at Sharereactor. Just type "dllink" in overnet and paste the link from sharereactor to download the file. There is no fancy GUI yet, but I'm sure that when this gets bigger, it will have one. I highly recomend this application, but be warned of it's lack of gui. For other file sharing information I recomend zeropaid. Although they don't have the latest mac software, and they are mainly M$ users, they can give you a general idea of the programs available for download.

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