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BitTorrent, Inc. Acquires uTorrent

ColinPL writes "BitTorrent, Inc. has taken the next step — the acquisition of uTorrent. In a joint announcement made today, the two firms have publicly solidified the merger. 'Together, we are pleased to announce that BitTorrent, Inc. and uTorrent AB have decided to join forces ... BitTorrent has acquired uTorrent as it recognized the merits of uTorrent's exceptionally well-written codebase and robust user community. Bringing together uTorrent's efficient implementation and compelling UI with BitTorrent's expertise in networking protocols will significantly benefit the community with what we envision will be the best BitTorrent client.'"

189 comments

  1. This could turn bad... by badenglishihave · · Score: 5, Interesting

    With Cohen walking hand in hand with the MPAA nowadays, how will this affect the privacy of current Torrent users such as myself? I have to admit I'm a bit worried. It doesn't come as a big surprise though. Torrent's excellent code and features make for one of the best clients available right now.

    1. Re:This could turn bad... by rucs_hack · · Score: 1

      what tickles me is that utorrents website advertises usenext, openly:

      'Access to MP3s, Movies & much more. Fast, Anonymous, and Easy!'

      One wonders if they got a tap on the shoulder 'get bought or you're screwed, we have new powerful friends'. It's a good codebase perhaps, but they've not exactly shown themselves to be trying to be legit.

    2. Re:This could turn bad... by anss123 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hate to say this, but torrent downloads are not anonymous. They can track your IP address, and can find out who you are from there.

    3. Re:This could turn bad... by SpecBear · · Score: 3, Informative

      ...how will this affect the privacy of current Torrent users such as myself?

      It won't. It's BitTorrent, you already have no privacy. Your IP address is readily available to anyone who cares to look.

    4. Re:This could turn bad... by LordSnooty · · Score: 5, Insightful
      how will this affect the privacy of current Torrent users such as myself? I have to admit I'm a bit worried. It doesn't come as a big surprise though.
      The answer is, use an OSS client like Azureus - which would be forked immediately if something like this happened.
    5. Re:This could turn bad... by badenglishihave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hardly my point. The privacy that concerns me now is any kind of software embedded into future versions of uTorrent. Obviously you will not have to use uTorrent if you choose not. But if Cohen has a handle on what goes into the client there is a possibility of tracking searches, monitoring filenames, reporting torrents with unrecognized hashes of movies, etc. It's stuff like this that current uTorrent users need to be made aware of.

    6. Re:This could turn bad... by billcopc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Not so long ago there were accusations that uTorrent was tracking searches, because it was presenting context-sensitive advertising. These allegations were firmly denied by the author, but it caused many people to think twice about this "miraculous" client. I'll be quite honest with everyone, I tried uTorrent and it didn't rub me the right way, but I'm fussy. I've been with BitComet for a while, I suffered through the tracker bans, and quite frankly if tracker operators think it wise to exclude people based on their software preference, it's really their loss because I can go elsewhere.

      The same applies to this Bittorrent/uTorrent merger. So what if Mr Cohen takes Bittorrent in a direction we don't like ? Are we forced to follow ? Heck no. On the odd chance that this group actually creates something better, we're free to embrace their brainchild, or pass on it and look for the next cool thing.

      What really grinds my gears though, is all the hubbub with the bittorrent "phenomenon". Seriously, what Mr Cohen has created is hardly any different from Kazaa or Napster, except for its so-called democracy. he's given everyone the freedom to easily spring up a tracker, which is really just an index server. So now instead of having one central hub that can be taken down, we have tens of thousands of puny little trackers that would require individual lawsuits to even try to take down, and no corporate entity behind them to pay "damages" to the litigators. Congrats! Give him a pat on the back for pulling off one of the first solid implementations of the painfully obvious evolution of decentralized file sharing. He didn't cure cancer, he didn't create peace in the middle east, he just took everyone's ideas and made them reality. Now move along, nothing more to see.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    7. Re:This could turn bad... by Doros · · Score: 1

      Every time one of my friends asks me why I prefer open source software to free (as in doesn't cost anything) software, I'm unable to explain these kinds of situations to them. As soon as the program becomes profitable, they sell the program and things tend to go downhill from there.

    8. Re:This could turn bad... by julesh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If BitTorrent is just a more-decentralized version of Kazaa or Napster, how come I get substantially faster transfer rates with BT than I ever did with either of those applications?

      Face it, the reason BT is so popular is because it is incredibly well engineered. The use of torrent files rather than simple searches with small hash sets (necessary in order to allow search results to be transferred effectively) allows small partial blocks to be shared more effectively and robustly than any other P2P file transfer system has ever allowed. Decoupling search from file transfer has allowed different people to concentrate on different aspects of the problem and evolve their systems with no interdependency on network updates. The use of a centralised tracker rather than the currently-in-vogue decentralised alternatives (DHT, network search) to find sources results in substantially better transfer rates, with only a small reliability sacrifice. And with a DHT as a fallback, not even that.

      Yes, none of these ideas were originally Cohen's. But as the first to combine them in a single application, I have nothing but respect for his work.

    9. Re:This could turn bad... by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 3, Informative
      I've been with BitComet for a while, I suffered through the tracker bans, and quite frankly if tracker operators think it wise to exclude people based on their software preference, it's really their loss because I can go elsewhere.
      They don't ban clients just because of "software preference". Usually that client does something bad or dumb, which causes problems and unneeded extra bandwidth consumption for the tracker, for the peers or for everybody. Gratuitous extra bandwidth consumption in a piece of software whose main purpose is to reduce it is pretty stupid, you have to admit.

      Furthermore, the BitComet client had its history of acting like an asshole, ignoring tracker restrictions, not respecting private flags and so on. And that's just bad form.
      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
    10. Re:This could turn bad... by Propaganda13 · · Score: 1

      and who says they didn't want to get bought out?

      1. Make software with possible illegal uses
      2. Become popular
      3. ???? = sell out
      4. Profit
      5. Repeat

      By selling out, you're getting money and limiting lawsuits that would involve you.

    11. Re:This could turn bad... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      I think he means that, since uTorrent is closed-source, there will be no way (short of sniffing your packets) to know if the MPAA gets pingged whenever you run uTorrent. Hell, if someone had your IP address before you and downloaded a movie, now the MPAA knows (1) "you" downloaded a movie, and (2) you are running P2P software. Checkmate, man.

    12. Re:This could turn bad... by generationxyu · · Score: 1

      Uh, the BitTorrent spec is fully available in about a million formats. There's a lot of projects with efficient implementations that you can use, or make your own. I suggest the open sourced libtorrent from Rasterbar. There's no need to subject yourself to the steaming pile of crap that is Azureus.

      --
      I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    13. Re:This could turn bad... by billcopc · · Score: 1

      The reason your torrent downloads go faster than Kazaa and sons, is because people usually run just a handful of torrents at once, whereas Kazaa shares your entire collection all the time. The same aggregate bandwidth pie is just being cut into larger pieces. Back when the old P2P networks were still popular, I had no difficulty maxing out my pipe, I just had a long list of 40-50 smallish files transferring at the same time. Now with torrents, people tend to post larger stuff, usually collections that classically you would have downloaded one by one; for example the complete works of Led Zeppelin, in one huge 4.5gb torrent versus fifty 100mb zips on Kazaa/Limewire. Sure, the one torrent shoots at 500kb/sec, but I'm sure you could have achieved 50 times 10kb/sec on Limewire, it just feels slower because the individual numbers are smaller.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
  2. Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Noooooooooooooo!...

    That sucking sound you hear...

    In soviet russia, utorrent buys...

    1. Sell out.
    2. Buy uTorrent.
    3 ...

    1. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      In soviet russia BitTorrentsU

  3. Ahhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    uTorrent. My favourite bittorrent client.

    Now THAT programmer is someone who cares about quality.

    1. Re:Ahhh... by sbben · · Score: 1

      Can't go wrong for 170kbs Now if only other software downloads were that feature complete and compact...

    2. Re:Ahhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Now THAT programmer is someone who cares about quality.

      Yes, a closed-source Windows-only P2P program with an inbuilt version of Tetris. That's quality, all right.

    3. Re:Ahhh... by binarybum · · Score: 1

      and money apparently. c'mon how long do you think it will be your favorite for now? the next version will likely be chock full of bloatware on account of this merger.

      --
      ôó
    4. Re:Ahhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does any of that detract from it being quality software? This ought to be good.

  4. The end? by blueCommand · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's hope it's not the end of a perfectly fine BT client. Maybe I've lived long enough with the embrace, extend, extingush thing, but this doesn't feel that good :(

    1. Re:The end? by Christopher_Edwardz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I thought the very same thing when I read the title.

      uTorrent was an awesome piece of software. It.just.worked. It was small, non-invasive, and non-evilware.

      My heart sank.

      I have no faith that this would be anything other than the death of uTorrent as a usable client.

      (Same as winamp years ago, same as winternals, same as ... the list goes on.)

      Oh well, which client does one use next?

    2. Re:The end? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just read the quote:
      "Following the acquisition, patented content delivery innovations made by BitTorrent, Inc. will be integrated in the Torrent client in a manner that will remain seamless to the community of users."

      What does this mean? Infected with DRM and mainline bloat. RIP utorrent...

    3. Re:The end? by Crunchie+Frog · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How about just stick with the existing version and don't upgrade?

      --
      --- Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity
    4. Re:The end? by Christopher_Edwardz · · Score: 1
      How about just stick with the existing version and don't upgrade?

      I am currently, but because things change, I want to have a successor picked out before this one goes the way of the dinosaur.

      I am also not putting it past bittorrent to 'tinker' with uTorrent and have it not connect to any other uTorrent client prior to their 'magic-so-gud-fer-u' version.

      I am assuming that uTorrent is now a dead line (hence the keeping) and that the torrentsphere will continue to evolve.

      I would like to take advantage of as much new-shiny-cool torrent goodness as evolves and therefore need a healthy client to latch on to.

      So get writing, you lazy coders! Bucketfulls of money await you (apparently) if you create a good one!

    5. Re:The end? by Zex_Suik · · Score: 1

      I agree, awesome client, simple useable features... better download the latest version TONIGHT before they change anything...

    6. Re:The end? by julesh · · Score: 1

      Oh well, which client does one use next?

      How about continuing to use the current version of uTorrent? It works well, doesn't seem to have any major bugs, is likely to continue working adequately for the foreseeable future (as BT is a much less fast-changing protocol than some of the other systems, like Gnutella which regularly introduces network-changing new features, and ED2K where many servers will kick you off if you're using a client they deem to be "too old") and has all the features most of us actually want.

    7. Re:The end? by Vix666 · · Score: 1

      Oh well, which client does one use next? How about BitComet?
      --
      I love TV. Infact, the only reason I goto work is because daytime TV sux..
    8. Re:The end? by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      staying with 1.6 ,and thats last one i DLed(few months ago).
      There alot of stuff i have that never gets updated.
      Its should work for years,wtihout any shiny new features.

    9. Re:The end? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      were you always such a whiney pussy or did that happen in recent years?

    10. Re:The end? by colmore · · Score: 1

      Perhaps an open-source one, which would prevent this sort of thing from happening?

      How long is it going to take for people to make the connection between the practices that make the software industry miserable and closedness?

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    11. Re:The end? by jo42 · · Score: 1
      How about just stick with the existing version and don't upgrade?

      Because some butthead mods at a private tracker will ban it because it is no longer "current".
    12. Re:The end? by bigwang · · Score: 1

      While this latest development (tee-hee) is a little sad, the software is still fantastic.

      The same can be said for winternal's tools and winamp. I still use both of these products. Winamp was bloated
      for a few versions, but the latest lite version is just as good as any pre-AOL version.

    13. Re:The end? by Christopher_Edwardz · · Score: 1

      I stopped using winamp when they removed the stream-saving feature "because no one wanted that". I do not imagine I will ever use winamp again. I use QCD Player for my media player and I see no reason to change. (Note: This is not Quintessential Media Player, which I think is junk.)

      The current versions of winternals software work fine. However, they will become obsolete soon, so the quest for replacements (either programmed by my own lazy and not-as-good hand, or found elsewhere) has begun. RootkitRevealer is the worst loss, I think. The others will age well enough.

  5. Leave it alone! by sc0p3 · · Score: 1

    Bringing together uTorrent's efficient implementation and compelling UI with BitTorrent's expertise in networking protocols will significantly benefit the community with what we envision will be the best BitTorrent client.'

    Oh god, leave it alone! uTorrent is perfect!

    1. Re:Leave it alone! by 0siris · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So why worry? If you keep the build you have right now I doubt it'll be incompatible with torrents any time soon. What I have right now does the job fine, and I don't really need any new features.

    2. Re:Leave it alone! by croddy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Perfect? It's still critically lacking in the license and published source code departments. Hopefully Cohen et al will resolve these issues.

    3. Re:Leave it alone! by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

      How do I know the build I have now doesnt have some bullshit back door to either autoupdate or spy on me? Its not exactly open source. If MPAA money is involved in this then utorrent users should be wary about downloading MPAA owned copyrights. I would think that the current version is now a moderate privacy and security risk.

    4. Re:Leave it alone! by Don+Negro · · Score: 2, Informative

      If that's your concern, use the official BitTorrent client.

      It's Open Source, written in Python, and the code is there for you to see.

      --

      Don Negro
      Perl 6 will give you the big knob. -- Larry Wall

    5. Re:Leave it alone! by sxtxixtxcxh · · Score: 0, Informative
      Q: Will the uTorrent code base be released into the open source?

      A: The uTorrent code base will remain closed source.

      from: http://forum.utorrent.com/viewtopic.php?id=17280
      --
      for a minute there, i lost myself...
    6. Re:Leave it alone! by thepotoo · · Score: 3, Informative
      uTorrent phones home for the DHT network feature; it's pretty important if you care about speed.
      Shut down the uTorrent central server, and you've effectively halved (or worse) everyone's download/upload speed.

      It's a serious problem; if it happens there could be an alternate server, but it would require third party hacks.

      --
      Obligatory Soundbite Catchphrase
    7. Re:Leave it alone! by PingSpike · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've got part swallowed-by-the-evil-empire and part they'll-fix-it-til-its-broke feelings about this. utorrent was the only client that really gave me what I wanted. The trouble with perfection is that from the top you can only go down.

    8. Re:Leave it alone! by danomac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...don't forget to turn off the auto update feature, if it has one. I used to use uTorrent before switching over to linux, and I don't remember if it has an auto-updater like some other clients do.

    9. Re:Leave it alone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It does. I just shut it off on mine.

    10. Re:Leave it alone! by SydBarrett · · Score: 1

      You could just turn off DHT, you pretty much have to for private trackers otherwise your upload/download ratio gets messed up.

    11. Re:Leave it alone! by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      Not true.

      Well, that's true that the "private" trackers (i.e. tree-houses for pimple-faced "leet" pricks who want to feel better about themselves while getting thoroughly suckered by the site owner) do demand that you durn DHT off. But that is because with DHT and peer exchange, their "private" little clubs would soon join the public swarm of peers with that torrent they are trying to squirrel away. The DHT does not affect the "share ratio" of the person who had it on to the exclusion to all else, but instead it allows the connecting clients to find out all of the peers in the "private" swarm and connect to all of them. Since the "private" tracker has no way of knowing who is connecting to whom outside of its knowledge, it is simply blissfully unaware of the bigger swarm in which its "private" swarm is now participating.

    12. Re:Leave it alone! by Mike89 · · Score: 1

      Hardly.. I max out my 512/512 line on practically every torrent.. no DHT..

    13. Re:Leave it alone! by aaronl · · Score: 1

      It has a "check for updates" option, but it just notified me the last time it was updated.

      BTW - I'm a full time Ubuntu user, and still run uTorrent. It's much better than anything available on Linux, as far as I've found. KTorrent is nice, but not very fast, and Azureus is a horrid pig. uTorrent runs fine through Wine, though.

    14. Re:Leave it alone! by Deluge · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that you've been burned by a private tracker for being a leech and are now all bitter since you have to get your stuff from public trackers at 2% of the speed?

      Requiring users to maintain a good ratio, and penalizing users for hit'n'run leeching is a good thing; it ensures that if you download a torrent, you stand a 99.9% chance of getting it all, and at a decent speed.

    15. Re:Leave it alone! by kripkenstein · · Score: 2, Interesting

      uTorrent phones home for the DHT network feature; it's pretty important if you care about speed.
      Shut down the uTorrent central server, and you've effectively halved (or worse) everyone's download/upload speed.


      Not quite. It uses router.utorrent.com to bootstrap into the DHT network. But if it already has known nodes (e.g. saved from the previous session) then it wouldn't 'phone home' as you call it. The whole purpose of the Kademlia DHT feature is to be decentralized, i.e. without the need for a central server. Granted, utorrent is closed-source, so we can't tell exactly how it uses router.utorrent.com, but that is how all the open-source clients that I know of do things.

    16. Re:Leave it alone! by Maestro4k · · Score: 1
      You could just turn off DHT, you pretty much have to for private trackers otherwise your upload/download ratio gets messed up.

      There's no need to turn off DHT completely to do that, uTorrent allows you to turn it off on a per-torrent basis.

    17. Re:Leave it alone! by Rytis · · Score: 1

      You may try Deluge. GTK-based, light and not overloaded with useless features. Though still in Alpha and there are some issues with download speed. By the way, AFAIK, no Windows version available.

    18. Re:Leave it alone! by LordSnooty · · Score: 1
      Requiring users to maintain a good ratio, and penalizing users for hit'n'run leeching is a good thing; it ensures that if you download a torrent, you stand a 99.9% chance of getting it all, and at a decent speed.
      Agreed. I have a connection with 475kB/s download, and on a private tracker I can regularly get 200-300kB/s. On a public tracker I rarely go over 30kB/s it seems, and more often 20 or less. The difference is remarkable.
    19. Re:Leave it alone! by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      I've never been a part of any "private" tracker. The whole idea of P2P is to share. "Private" trackers go contrary to that notion.

    20. Re:Leave it alone! by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      I regularly get ~500kB/s downloads from public trackers. Yes, I also get 20kB/s. That's life. But moaning about how us, dirty unwashed masses, always get 30kB/s all the time just paints you as a spoiled, whining elitist in search of "special" treatment.

      Which you are.

    21. Re:Leave it alone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aww, poor baby could never get an invite to a private tracker. You got it backwards - private trackers enforce sharing, whereas public trackers give no penalties for hit'n'run leeches.

    22. Re:Leave it alone! by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      You got it backwards - private trackers enforce sharing, whereas public trackers give no penalties for hit'n'run leeches.

      No. Private trackers are designed to restrict sharing to the "in" group. In essence they are the equivalent of private clubs where one needs to know a secret handshake to get in, the whole point of course being to make their vain, empty headed members feel "superior" to all those outside. Sharing is far more efficient when it is wide open to participation, even if there are those who mis-behave. Large redundancy ratios efficiently compensate for any "hit-and-run" leachers. With public trackers the torrents have far longer life spans and far higher overall reliability. That is why the "private" trackers only ever concern themselves with the latest, most popular torrents and quickly abandon anything which is not considered "cool" and "leet" amongst their inane membership.

  6. Private sites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, all of the private sites run by power-crazed morons who ban the BitTorrent client but embrace utorrent are going to have some thinking to do. Shame they're not capable of it (bitmetv.org, I'm looking at you).

  7. So.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does this mean that they'll be re-naming the product to BloatTorrent?

    "Complete with all new music protection!"

  8. on IRC by Don+Negro · · Score: 5, Informative

    Bram and Ludde are answering questions on #utorrent-questions -- irc.p2p-network.net

    --

    Don Negro
    Perl 6 will give you the big knob. -- Larry Wall

  9. With you kind permission ... by kryten_nl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... I'd like to turn this into an "Ask Slasdot". Which client should I use, are there any good GPL clients or promissiong projects?

    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
    1. Re:With you kind permission ... by jc87 · · Score: 1

      Ktorrent, gnome-bt, Azureus, deluge, etc...

      --
      def greetings(x): return {'friend': 'Howdy', 'enemy': 'Dye [sic]'}.get(x, 'g0 4w4y, l4m0r')
    2. Re:With you kind permission ... by fluffywuffy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      http://www.binarynotions.com/halite.php

      Open source, very small (473 kb), looks promising.

    3. Re:With you kind permission ... by bcmm · · Score: 1

      The Curses version of the official Bittorrent client (you use Unix, of course :-). For me, it's by far the best client to leave on overnight, because it's far more stable than any X-based torrent client (your X might be more stable than mine. I use nvidia drivers). I run it in a screen session, and I've never seen anything go wrong in many many days of running time.

      Unlike the 'console' version, It provides a nice display of current upload and download rates and a progress bar. It doesn't seem to support multiple torrents, but you can always run another instance in another screen window.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    4. Re:With you kind permission ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ??? i used the GTK based bittorent client and it allows multiple downloads, granted, i have to click on the download with my mouse and select "download now".

    5. Re:With you kind permission ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If you want a fast, feature-full, GPL console client,try rTorrent.

      I switched to it after using the ncurses/shadow client since the beginning, managing multiple torrents isn't easy with the official client, even using screen.

    6. Re:With you kind permission ... by rehabdoll · · Score: 1

      libtorrent with the rtorrent front-end. http://libtorrent.rakshasa.no/

    7. Re:With you kind permission ... by ksheff · · Score: 1

      There is a 'launchmany' curses mode for the official client that will process all the torrents in a given directory. I recall the exact name of the command at the moment, but it's slick in that it will periodically scan a directory for new torrent or that a torrent has been removed. It will display the upload/download stats for each torrent on the screen and scroll this information if you have too many torrents to display in the current terminal. The advantage of this compared to running multiple instances of the regular curses client in several different screen windows is that the upload/download rate limits are enforced for all the torrents as a whole.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    8. Re:With you kind permission ... by Jack+Action · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Rtorrent is by far the torrent client with the smallest footprint.

      I tried them all to get one that worked on a 486 with 60MB RAM and no X. Rtorrent (with ncurses ui) was the only one that didn't max out the resources.

      Now I can turn my 4Ghz energy hog off at night, and do my downloading on the 486, which uses about as much electricity as a light bulb.

      (For ed2k on the same machine I use mldonkey.

    9. Re:With you kind permission ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The most *promising* project looks like BTG (http://btg.berlios.de/) based on Rasterbar's libtorrent
      (http://www.rasterbar.com/products/libtorrent/inde x.html) (not to be confused with Rakshasa's libtorrent and rtorrent). It's a daemon that supports DHT (rtorrent doesn't) and has multiple front ends (e.g. web, ncurses, GTK gui) though XML-RPC. It seems to be the most flexible torrent client, ideal for the power user.

      Unfortunately packages are not available in Debian repositories for either libtorrent or BTG (although Deluge, which uses libtorrent, is available?).

    10. Re:With you kind permission ... by dbc001 · · Score: 1

      I've been really happy with Azureus. I haven't really compared it to other clients though so I'd love to hear some discussion.

    11. Re:With you kind permission ... by Bugmaster · · Score: 1

      IMO Azureus is the best. uTorrent has a way smaller memory footprint, and a much faster startup time, but these things simply don't matter much to me. Azureus's memory use is still reasonable (compared to say, Visual Studio, *shudder*), and its startup time is irrelevant to me because I never shut it down. It doesn't use any measurable amount of CPU, either, but it comes with a plethora of features and plugins, notably DHT, that blow uTorrent out of the water.

      Be warned, though: I hear that Azureus is going to re-write their client to act primarily as an on-demand movie viewer, with some weird convoluted UI that makes no sense. So, enjoy it while it lasts...

      --
      >|<*:=
    12. Re:With you kind permission ... by jcarkeys · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Azureus takes up an absolutely insane amount of RAM and runs very, very slowly. I'm very sad that uTorrent is gone down. I guess I'll be sticking with version 1.6 for quite some time now.

    13. Re:With you kind permission ... by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Now I can turn my 4Ghz energy hog off at night, and do my downloading on the 486, which uses about as much electricity as a light bulb.

      Alternatively, you could use a modern Mini-ITX machine or laptop as your only machine. It would consume about the same power as the 486 while being much more powerful as a computer.

      I admit it's pretty cool that you can make use of a 486, but it's not the best solution for saving energy.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    14. Re:With you kind permission ... by Curien · · Score: 1

      Funny... My Sempron 3000+-based machine uses about 40W peak.

      --
      It's always a long day... 86400 doesn't fit into a short.
    15. Re:With you kind permission ... by Xybre · · Score: 1

      uTorrent has DHT, as well as torrent and individual file prioritizing, a tiny memory footprint, a tiny amount of CPU usage, a clean simple, customizable interface, and it's not written in Java.

      However, its security and simplicity may likely come into question after what has occurred. Which is very sad. I'll be looking for a command line client after this, nothing with a gui is going to be able to compare to it's resource usage or have such power in simplicity.

      --
      Eternity is a time bomb.
    16. Re:With you kind permission ... by AlanS2002 · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's more the java runtime taking up the large amount of ram. The upside of this is that if you are running multiple java programs memory usage begins to level out.

      --
      Not all conservatives are stupid,
      but it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
      - Hume
    17. Re:With you kind permission ... by AlanS2002 · · Score: 1

      libtorrent is however available for Fedora in Fedora Extras.

      --
      Not all conservatives are stupid,
      but it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
      - Hume
    18. Re:With you kind permission ... by thre5her · · Score: 1

      Funny... My Via C3 1GHz machine uses ~15W peak. It loads an OpenBSD image from CompactFlash into RAM, and is fast enough to serve MP3s and torrents while remaining completely silent; that is, until the RAM cache fills up and flushes to an external disk. Not good for power outages, I know, but those aren't exactly frequent.

    19. Re:With you kind permission ... by BokLM · · Score: 1

      Be warned, though: I hear that Azureus is going to re-write their client to act primarily as an on-demand movie viewer, with some weird convoluted UI that makes no sense. So, enjoy it while it lasts...

      Hey, if they make something that sux, we can still use the current Azureus. And it's GPL, so people can still continue to improve it ...

    20. Re:With you kind permission ... by julesh · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, you could use a modern Mini-ITX machine or laptop as your only machine. It would consume about the same power as the 486 while being much more powerful as a computer.

      I admit it's pretty cool that you can make use of a 486, but it's not the best solution for saving energy.


      I don't think your idea would actually improve his energy consumption. I don't have a 486 to test with, but some of my older Pentium systems use only ~40W fully running and loaded. My laptop uses about 80W in this state. I don't have a Mini-ITX system to test with, but suspect that the processor alone would consume than his entire 486 PC.

      Remember that 486's were passively cooled. There's a reason they could get away with that.

    21. Re:With you kind permission ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For *nix boxen, you can always use rtorrent http://libtorrent.rakshasa.no/ which is opensource and concentrates on high performance. It has an console only ncurses GUI, but I'm absolutely hooked on it because it is pretty feature rich and fairly easy to grasp. From the site: "LibTorrent is a BitTorrent library written in C++ for *nix, with a focus on high performance and good code. The library differentiates itself from other implementations by transfering directly from file pages to the network stack. On high-bandwidth connections it is able to seed at 3 times the speed of the official client." Screw utorrent's beta WebUI, the crappy azureus remote or setting up a bunch of stuff for torrent flux, screen + rtorrent over ssh is simply an unbeatable combination and anyone running a *nix box should look into it, I'm hooked on it and wouldn't use anything else. BTW it has no relation to the libtorrent on sourceforge.

    22. Re:With you kind permission ... by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      I see a lot of people giving props to rtorrent, (yay for screen and other text-y goodness) but I'll throw in my $.02 with ktorrent - I like the IP blocking filter in place on it, handles multiple torrents, and doesn't get in my way when I don't want it to be. ;) (You are running linux and kde, right?)

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    23. Re:With you kind permission ... by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      I don't think your idea would actually improve his energy consumption. I don't have a 486 to test with, but some of my older Pentium systems use only ~40W fully running and loaded. My laptop uses about 80W in this state. I don't have a Mini-ITX system to test with, but suspect that the processor alone would consume than his entire 486 PC.

      My laptop has a 1.6 GHz Pentium M, and the power supply is rated at 60 watts max. I've undervolted the processor so it should consume even less. Of course, most of the time it's not fully loaded.

      Remember that 486's were passively cooled. There's a reason they could get away with that.

      So is my Mini-ITX machine (VIA Nehemiah 1 GHz). The total max consumption of the machine is somewhere around 60 watts as well (it has a 80 watt laptop-style power supply), not counting the LCD. Most of the time it's only running as a server and the display is blanked.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    24. Re:With you kind permission ... by timbo234 · · Score: 1

      Which client should I use, are there any good GPL clients or promissiong projects?

      IMHO Azureus is really excellent and really easy to use. It has 2 disadvantages though:
      1) Its written in Java which means you have the high memory usage, flakiness and VM installation foo to deal with. Having said that though it works pretty well on my x86_64 Linux box, although my friend complains it eventually slows his Win XP machine to a crawl if not rebooted.
      2) Its GUI based so its not as easy to remote schedule over an ssh session (have to use VNC-over-ssh or something)

      --
      Pre-canned Evolution Links for all those Slashdot holy wars.
  10. You can't display the micro symbol at ./? by KenAndCorey · · Score: 1

    I tried the HTML entity code, but it doesn't work either.

    1. Re:You can't display the micro symbol at ./? by empaler · · Score: 1

      I tried using the mju in labelling, that just disappeared as well after reloading.

    2. Re:You can't display the micro symbol at ./? by TheStonepedo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I think we've stumbled onto a much more important thing than news about a buyout. Why does slashdot suck it up in the unicode department? CmdrTaco, we await your defense.

      --
      I'll be your candy shop of infinite deliciousity if you'll be my discotheque of endless rump-shaking.
  11. bleh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was a company behind uTorrent? I always thought it were some random dudes writing the program for the community. I guess this was the reason they never wanted to release the source.

    Prediction: In 2-3 months nobody's gonna use uTorrent anymore.

    1. Re:bleh by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Informative

      uTorrent was written by one guy by the name of Ludvig Strigeus, not some random dudes. He's Swedish, I think. One of the sharper coders on the planet, I'd say. Anyway, he never wanted to release the source because ... he didn't want to release the source. No particular reason why he should have, really. This idea that every programmer that does something way cool somehow owes the community his source code is just silly. He gave away a hot product for free, that's good enough for me.

      Not that I wouldn't mind taking a look at that codebase. You know, just for curiosity's sake.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:bleh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't blame him for not releasing the source (it's his right), nor do I blame him for selling out (I would). It's still a shame, though, because I really liked uTorrent.

      1. Make uTorrent as feature-rich as the official client
      2. Add more partner-sponsored addons during installation that are checked by default
      3. Profit!

      (There is no "???" step since this model seems to actually work)

    3. Re:bleh by wrook · · Score: 1

      This idea that every programmer that does something way cool somehow owes the community his source code is just silly.

      I can't speak for everybody, but I feel that this is a mis-characterization of those that prefer Free software. For me each software package is a value proposition. Well functioning software that runs quickly and has a small footprint has value to me. Software that gives me the 4 basic freedoms also has value to me. For me, the 4 freedoms usually carry more value than a small footprint.

      So I don't think it's unreasonable for me to say, "Does it come with source code?" and to be disappointed if the answer is "No". I don't think it's unreasonable for me to explain to people why I value these freedoms more than specific features of a piece of software. I don't think it's unreasonable to ask for what I value.

      It's also not unreasonable for the author to say no. But it's unfortunate when that happens.

      Just my two cents -- I hope that doesn't seem silly.

    4. Re:bleh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, ludde is also the original author of ScummVM.

    5. Re:bleh by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see the source too, but I'd have to download a pirate copy of Visual Cobol first to view it with. VCobol!!! ye gads!

      (on the other hand, if its as good as it is, despite using VCobol, he's an excellent programmer. Masochistic, but excellent :) )

    6. Re:bleh by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Well, I wasn't trying to characterize the entire community, just those that (from some of the comments I read) feel somehow entitled to a developer's source code.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    7. Re:bleh by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Dollars to doughnuts the Cobol in uTorrent isn't pure: to do what he's doing in that amount of space there's going to be a Texas shitload of Win32 calls and probably some inline assembler. But still ... Cobol. Oh well. No accounting for taste.

      But you know, once word of this gets out bank programmers are going to be insufferable.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  12. Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd add Bitsoup.org to that list. They're currently under an extreme whitelist that bans not only Mainline but also nearly all non-Windows clients. Fuck trackers that force Azureus onto *nix and Mac users.

    1. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why is it that people involved in Internet piracy seem to mostly be half a step away from "No! You can't play in my club!"? Maybe we should start up nohomerstorrents.com. And I feel your pain about the clients - I've been forced to dedicate most of my server CPU and RAM to keeping azureus up because of their idiotic policies.

  13. It isn't as if uTorrent needed this.... by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 1

    uTorrent rocks and this may make downloading movies tougher since BitTorrent agreed to not allow downloading of copyrighted material. Looks like it goes downhill from here.

    1. Re:It isn't as if uTorrent needed this.... by L7_ · · Score: 1

      I wonder about the analogies of the original Napster used to download music compared to BitTorrent used to download movies and tv shows. If the bittorrent clients in 2010 are all like Napster turned out to be 5 years later... *shudder*

    2. Re:It isn't as if uTorrent needed this.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      uTorrent rocks and this may make downloading movies tougher

      Damnit. It's people like you that contribute to the shutdown of cool warez outlets. The MPAA and RIAA don't give a damn about warez. Rent the god damn thing from NetFlix and use one of the many free copying utilities to make yourself your own copy, you cheap bastard.

  14. That's not all by TheStonepedo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    By default torrent includes a list of torrent search engines. It's as if the developers are encouraging piracy rather than hiding behind the pretense that people can use the software for legitimate stuff. I reckon most bittorrent users, like me, use the protocol and their favorite client way more often for pirating music, movies, and porn than for downloading legitimate stuff.

    --
    I'll be your candy shop of infinite deliciousity if you'll be my discotheque of endless rump-shaking.
    1. Re:That's not all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For fuck's sake, slashdot really should allow unicode. Pretend there's a \u00B5 before the third word of my previous post.

    2. Re:That's not all by fohat · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's the new anti (alt+0220)ber geek code they implemented with the last CSS update. Remain Calm, all is well!

      --
      Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    3. Re:That's not all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, okay, but that's kind of hard to do when your an AC, what post are you talking about?

    4. Re:That's not all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      torrent...

  15. How will this affect their user base? by hrrY · · Score: 1

    Most people that use uTorrent, use it based on the predicate that it allows for more privacy, now that the **AA's have a hand in their development(investor role)I see user's jumping ship almost instantly. Chances are their going spout off that same rigamarole that every other P2P company has after they've changed their business approach, "Downloading copyrighted material is illegal and we don't stand by those that misuse our software." etc, xyz. *Yet* they manufacture a very user friendly means of applying blocklists, as well as an outgoing encryption method, and how could I forget the very flexible interface for RATIO/DL/UL spoofing that's built in...and if the user(s) was DL'ing or seeding legitimate material why on earth would they need all these functionalities...
    Frankly I'm a little disappointed, but not surprised.

    1. Re:How will this affect their user base? by LordLucless · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most people that use uTorrent, use it based on the predicate that it allows for more privacy

      I've never heard of anyone using it for that reason. Personally, I use it primarily for it's feature-set and small footprint, and its on that basis that I recommend it to others.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  16. Time to turn off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    the automatic updates in uTorrent. Not that I dont trust the nice people at BitTorrent Inc., of course, it's just that...yeah...sometimes off is better.

    1. Re:Time to turn off by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      That is exactly the first thing I did as soon as I read the headline. I was worried about the fact it wasn't open source from the very start, I feared something like this would happen.

    2. Re:Time to turn off by gordgekko · · Score: 1

      Of course, since we don't have the source, we don't know if uTorrent can surreptitiously download "improvements" mandated by the new owners.

      --
      You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
  17. There's Goes the Neighborhood by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I liked uTorrent because it wasn't Bittorrent. An alternative supplier with a great client who wasn't in bed with the MPAA. Makes me wonder if MPAA money was behind this acquisition.

    Reminds me of the time when Microsoft couldn't compete with another x86 assembler on the market. They bought it out, and rather than use it to replace the relatively awful MASM, killed it instead.

    Will uTorrent face the same fate? Can we all make money by writing a better BT than BT and taking money for it afterwards now?

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:There's Goes the Neighborhood by moore.dustin · · Score: 1

      Azuerus would have went first dont you think? They are actively trying to expand what they do with videos and such. uTorrent was/is strickly what it says it is, a client to manage torrents that leaves a very small footprint.

    2. Re:There's Goes the Neighborhood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that's what people have been warning you about for decades now: when you use proprietary software, support for the product you use may stop at any time, for a variety of reasons. This shouldn't come as a surprise.

      As for MASM, I was rather fond of it. I definitely wouldn't call it 'awful'. Was it really necessary for your argument to put it down, or do you think that on Slashdot saying something negative about a Microsoft product lends credibility to your argument?

    3. Re:There's Goes the Neighborhood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      uTorrent was/is strickly what it says it is, a client to manage torrents that leaves a very small footprint.

      But that's what I want. If I was looking for some slow and bloated Java POS I would have considered Azuerus.

      Java is cool because it's cross-platform, but it sucks because it's cross-platform.

    4. Re:There's Goes the Neighborhood by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
      As for MASM, I was rather fond of it. I definitely wouldn't call it 'awful'. Was it really necessary for your argument to put it down, or do you think that on Slashdot saying something negative about a Microsoft product lends credibility to your argument?

      MASM was never best of breed. Not until it was the only breed left.

      And as for your cheap shot of putting down Microsoft because they're Microsoft, I only put them down when they deserve it -- and killing a superior product deserves it. I don't have to invent reasons to put Microsoft down -- they give me plenty of good ones for free.

      --
      "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  18. Azureus by TheShadowzero · · Score: 1

    Anyone want to explain to me why uTorrent is considered better than Azureus? I have used both, and I much prefer Azureus.

    --
    If history repeats itself, why can't we study the future?
    1. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only reason I still use Azureus is because it is multi-platform. If there is a linux client for uTorrent I sure as hell cannot find it.

    2. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not playing with you anymore. Feel free to take your Quad-core 4 gigabyte RAM box and GO HOME.....

    3. Re:Azureus by Laebshade · · Score: 1

      uTorrent is smaller and faster. The downside is that it isn't cross-platform (and very ugly when using wine).

    4. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Azureus is written in Java, this implies high CPU usage and eating up RAM. Up to a point where my computer was getting all choppy n shitty because there were no resources left for the OS and other programs.
      Enter utorrent, a small and nibble program doing everything I wanted without eating my computer alive.
      I told everyone who bitched about Azureus to get utorrent and they were happy ever since.

    5. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uTorrent = 170KB
      Azureus = Java

    6. Re:Azureus by Sarusa · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you need all the features of Azureus there's nothing else that can match it.

      On the other hand, uTorrent does just about every damn thing most people need and it does it in 1/10th the CPU usage and 1/100th the memory usage of Azureus.

      I like never having to worry about whether my torrent program is running in the background while I'm doing foreground tasks so I love uTorrent. I just leave it on all the time, running away, and never even notice it while I'm playing NWN2 or editing photos or watching videos or whatever. And that's the big win.

    7. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two words,
      memory footprint.

      Now i ask you, have you ever run azureus with more than 20 torrents on a average machine?

    8. Re:Azureus by fire_missionary · · Score: 1
      Because uTorrent has a very small footprint on your system ~400kb or less IIRC... And you do not have to install it.

      wheras azureus may have more feature, some of which i like about it, it also requires Java and has a quite large footprint... again IIRC its around 18mb on a fresh install, not including the seprate java install required.

      --
      "The reverse side also has a reverse side." - Japanese Proverb
    9. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it isn't a bloated memory-sucking Java program built using a half-assed toolkit?

    10. Re:Azureus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      utorrent looks to be a leeching client. All the utorrent ip connected to me are downloading. The ones at 100% are not uploading. I syated connected to 20 different utorrent clients for 10 days straight. I got 1k. They took all they wanted but never up'ed anything themselves. Hence leeching. That was when I started banning utorrent clients. Ever since I get a ton of baned ips but I have better upload and download %. Which is what I thought p2p was all about.

      If your not gonna up your favorite distro then don't torrent it look for the regular downloads.

    11. Re:Azureus by bcat24 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I use uTorrent and it uploads just fine. I always try to upload at least as much as I download.

    12. Re:Azureus by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      uTorrent allows you to set an upper limit for download/upload data rates. I set mine to 5k/sec (I'm on slow Aussie DSL) so I can still do online stuff while it's chugging along. You could probably set that limit very low to avoid uploading. However, part of the premise of BitTorrent was that it was supposed to handle that sort of abuse at the protocol level; if you never upload, then you're the lowest priority when it comes to downloading. You shouldn't have to block people (especially not a whole client) to prevent leeching; the protocol should do it for you.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    13. Re:Azureus by beango · · Score: 1

      nope... wine+utorrent under linux is fine... who stares at the GUI while the files are being downloaded ?
      it beats many linux GUI or headless clients out there, on footprint, features and performance...

    14. Re:Azureus by timelessroguestar · · Score: 3, Informative

      have you ever tried playing games in the background with Azureus open? With uTorrent you can play nearly any game with no noticeable performance penalty unless it's a hard drive happy game. uTorrent is so efficient that it uses fewer CPU cycles than my application firewall, that's impressive.

      --
      Timeless Rogue Star - Defile Convention - Transcend Time, Life, the Universe, and Everything.
    15. Re:Azureus by Duds · · Score: 1

      Because Azureus is slow, unstable, bloated, uses hideous amounts of memory and takes a PHD in advanced "fucking stupid menus" to configure.

      utorrent is 170k, doesn't need installing and is lightning quick on huge torrents.

    16. Re:Azureus by julesh · · Score: 1

      Anyone want to explain to me why uTorrent is considered better than Azureus?

      On my machine, Azureus uses ~80MB of memory; uTorrent uses about 20MB. That's memory I want to use for other things.
      Azureus has very slow UI updates. Sometimes I wait for several seconds to get control back after doing something. This is a problem I've never had with uTorrent.
      Azureus uses about 30-40% of my CPU time when its maxing out my connection. uTorrent less than 10%.
      Azureus doesn't have a single feature that I want that isn't in uTorrent as well.

      The choice is a no-brainer.

    17. Re:Azureus by noamsml · · Score: 1

      uTorrent runs quite well under WINE. Granted, that's not the best solution out there, and I'd much prefer a native version, but in many ways it's better than Azureus.

  19. Back up your copies by ZDRuX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ladies and gentleman, maybe it's time you start archiving all the current and future version of uTorrent incase they decide to implement "features" you don't want. Having a copy sit somewhere on CD isn't a bad idea anyway. I have personally tried uTorrent and don't like it, and went back to Azureus. Mainly because I have gotten too used to the interface, and it's open-source project so I know what I`m getting.

    --
    The magical number is: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    1. Re:Back up your copies by TheShadowzero · · Score: 4, Informative

      ZDRuX, meet http://oldversion.com/. OldVersion.com, meet ZDRuX

      --
      If history repeats itself, why can't we study the future?
  20. goodbye, good ole u! by uberCHIEFTAIN! · · Score: 1

    No more updating uTorrent for me now. I'm staying with 1.6

    1. Re:goodbye, good ole u! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AS a matter of fact - uTorrent 1.6.1 beta is the latest, not 1.6.
      It has the new WebUI and stuff :-)

  21. And? by Sneakernets · · Score: 0

    There are many alternatives to the main bittorrent program out there now! I wouldn't worry about it.

    --
    "No freeman shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson
  22. Free PHP web based torrent - Plug by DebianDog · · Score: 1

    I never liked either of them. uTorrent is Windows only and BitTorrent is somewhat lacking on the Mac. As much as I think Azureus is cool, I am starting to take a liking to Torrent Flux. Plus... I can run it on my hosting site.

    1. Re:Free PHP web based torrent - Plug by Shadarr · · Score: 1

      The reason uTorrent is so good is that it's Windows-only. As soon as you try to make something cross-platform, it can't be as optimized. I mean, parts of it were written in assembler!

    2. Re:Free PHP web based torrent - Plug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TorrentFlux shows us why we will never have a BT client comparable to uTorrent under Linux: all good programmers, ie people who know how to optimize things, are too busy on the kernel side.

      Why on earth a bittorrent client has to depend on Apache and MySQL for indexing a dozen downloads and put them on a webpage? What happened to using the right tool for the job?
      Never *ever* use SQL for indexing anything with less than hundreds of records, unless the data complexity requires it (lots of tables). In this case a simple linear search would be ok.
      Also, Boa is much much more suited for serving simple web pages than Apache.

    3. Re:Free PHP web based torrent - Plug by DebianDog · · Score: 1

      As a DBA I 100% agree. I have had 800MB DB's grow to 1.4T (seemingly overnight) and managers ask me "What's changed?" (You are in PHB syndrome) "Umm... do you remember the change control we did for the last 2 years? Do you see your reflection in the mirror?"

    4. Re:Free PHP web based torrent - Plug by DebianDog · · Score: 1

      Oh the answer to your question: - Short sighted - No room for growth 1000's of rows grows to "millions of rows" faster then you would believe. ;)

  23. I reckon bitcomet is far better.. by traveller604 · · Score: 0

    And I guess it isn't just me. ;)

  24. Open? by one_red_eye · · Score: 1

    Does this mean there may be a Unix/Linux uTorrent client in the future?

    1. Re:Open? by alib001 · · Score: 1
      uTorrent and BitTorrent FAQ:

      Q: How will uTorrent's technology be integrated with the current BitTorrent client?

      A: Although uTorrent is lightweight, it is missing the patented innovations BitTorrent has made at the protocol level. It is also lacking an implementation for Mac and Linux. We will improve uTorrent in these arenas.

      Your subject: Open? And the FAQ says:

      The uTorrent code base will remain closed source.
  25. irc chat log: with ludde and bram by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://digg.com/tech_news/BitTorrent_merges_with_u Torrent

    Some answers from #uTorrent-questions:

    -will uTorrent be ported to Linux?
    probably

    -how many lines of code is it comprised of?
    ~50-60K

    -will encryption be removed?
    no (answered by Bram)

    -features most important to you (directed @ Bram)
    low memory footprint, code size, cpu usage

    -is there any thoughts to an osx client?
    (Bram) we plan to produce an up to date osx client, but that's significant porting work

    -are there any features that will be removed from uTorrent?
    (Bram) we're leaving the uTorrent client mostly alone for now, on the grounds that people like it (further defined 'mostly' as in, not much of anything substantive will change)

    -will uTorrent be replacing the original python client?
    (Bram) we aren't announcing integration plan details right now

    -Bram, are you talking with asus and other router makers for putting uTorent in there?
    (Bram) we're talking to lots of people

    -will uTorrent ever be open-sourced?
    (Bram) not in the forseeable future, but we'll continue to maintain an open source reference implementation

    -Bram, you said before that you're not a big fan of protocol header encryption... do you still stand behind this?
    (Bram) it isn't much harder for an isp to recognize encrypted headers than unencrypted headers.

    -will content be monitored?
    (Bram) absolutly not

    -does the uTorrent codebase compile on linux today (in your labs?)
    (ludde) No

    -ludde can't develop anything new for uTorrent?
    (ludde) bittorrent inc will do the majority of the development work

    -what IDE was uTorrent developed on?
    (ludde) Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 with a few routines written in visual cobol. uTorrent was written in C++ with some tiny chunks of assembly

    -will uTorrent continue to be free?
    (Bram) utorrent will continue to be available and continue to be free (as in, no cost, not open source)

    -Utorrent uses a lot of Windows API's right? Won't that be a problem when porting to *nux/OSX
    (ludde) Yes, the UI is tightly bound to Windows APis, however, the core backend is easier to port.
    (Bram) the utorrent UI is windows native, so porting that part to osx or linux is a significant amount of work (but planned to be done at some point)

    1. Re:irc chat log: with ludde and bram by bcat24 · · Score: 1

      Visual COBOL?! WTF?

    2. Re:irc chat log: with ludde and bram by Umbrae · · Score: 2, Informative

      As he said, it was C++ with small bits of assembly. He probably just used the Visual COBOL IDE to write the assembly.

    3. Re:irc chat log: with ludde and bram by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -features most important to you

      How about not sucking as much air as the official BT client does?

      This is a sad day. I like uTorrent :(

    4. Re:irc chat log: with ludde and bram by Z34107 · · Score: 1

      I doubt he used the Visual COBOL IDE to write the assembly; in C++ (at least Microsoft's Visual Studio 6.0 flavor it it) you put your assembly in an __asm{} block. No need to boot another IDE.

      But... I didn't know there was such a thing as Visual COBOL. Or that it worked without a tape reel.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    5. Re:irc chat log: with ludde and bram by Umbrae · · Score: 1

      In truth, neither did I. I use g++. I was just making an educated guess. Which I guess I shouldn't do. But then again, that's what almost every slashdot user does, they just don't admit it as readily. :P

  26. Why is anyone surprised? by Knowbuddy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Disclaimer: I'm the guy that wrote TorrentSpy (the application, not the web site) and have contributed a small amount of code to the Python/core BT client and tracker. I haven't written any code for BT in a while, nor have I chatted with Bram in literally years, but ...

    From what I remember, Bram always viewed the Python/core as a sort of "reference implementation" -- it was never his goal to make the Python client or tracker the end-all be-all.

    Why is it then surprising that he'd want to bring on a client that doesn't have to be Open Source, and thus doesn't have to be clean and perfect, but is still sexy as hell? He still keeps his reference implementation that supports the features and is easy to reimplement a dozen times in two dozen languages ... but he also gets something he can brandish at anyone who wants to throw money at BT.

    Remember that his goal since incorporating has been to legitimize and broaden the adoption of BT. A sexy client is a huge step towards that goal. It's not like Sony or the MPAA or whomever is going to distribute a customized version of Azureus any time soon -- it's a beast! But a custom version of uTorrent? A 1MB executable that you could throw on a CD that requires zero install? YTF not? Remember also that Strigeus has been working towards licensing out the core engine for uTorrent.

    Plate. Shrimp. Plate of Shrimp.

    Some of you are excessively paranoid. You know that, right?

    (Yes, yes, I know: "Welcome to Slashdot".)

    1. Re:Why is anyone surprised? by one_red_eye · · Score: 1

      Why not OpenSource it? Are there fiendish backdoors?

    2. Re:Why is anyone surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Plate. Shrimp. Plate of Shrimp.

      A lot of people are allergic to shellfish.

    3. Re:Why is anyone surprised? by LordSnooty · · Score: 1
      Some of you are excessively paranoid. You know that, right?
      But under this new regime I assume they'll charge for torrents of the latest & greatest movies, yes? Now what's to stop me using this shiny new official client to grab the latest release off the scene, probably before it's available via BituTorrent? Surely this would be a big problem for the Man. Except, what if Bram extended his promise to wipe out infringing content - what if there was a way of ripping up unauthorised torrents in new-u-torrent? Just think, they could even use data to identify and warn infringers...
    4. Re:Why is anyone surprised? by Telvin_3d · · Score: 1

      Shocking, they are going to charge for movies? No, really?

      There is nothing wrong with movie companies charging for their product. There is something wrong with movie companies charging for a crippled and limited versions of their product. there is a differnce. If the movie companies want to toss their conent out there, I say more power to them and there are worse ways to do it than through uTorrent. I would be happy to drop $2 or whatever for fast, good quality copies of episodes for series I like as they come out.

    5. Re:Why is anyone surprised? by julesh · · Score: 1

      But a custom version of uTorrent? A 1MB executable that you could throw on a CD that requires zero install?

      Just to correct your apparent misapprehension -- uTorrent is substantially smaller than 1MB. The version I have installed is less than 200K.

  27. Explanation request by rg3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Reading some of the comments in here and from people chatting in the IRC channels linked from a previous comment, I see many people are worried about this. In one corner we have Bram Cohen, a man which designed the bittorrent protocol and provided an open source, multiplatform, reference implementation of it. He also has a website that linked to illegal content, apparently, and made a deal with the MPAA so it would comply with the law (DMCA). Else, he could have been sued and lose a lot of money, I understand. On the opposite corner we have the utorrent author, someone who is apparently a good programmer that provided a free, non open source client, which is tiny, featureful and runs very well under its platform, which is Windows.

    Now, when I read people saying they don't trust (sic) Bram Cohen and that they will no longer update utorrent, or that this will be a bad thing, I don't really understand why they are worried. Is it for technical reasons? Do you fear utorrent will stop being tiny _if_ it's made multiplatform? What motivates that fear? Something from the past that I missed? Or is it because of the deal between Cohen and the MPAA? If so, why do you consider it bad? Do you fear the bittorrent protocol and official implementation will suffer because of that deal and that same situation will extend to utorrent? Honest questions, really. Please, englighten me.

    1. Re:Explanation request by rmerry72 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      What motivates that fear?

      I think the fear is that the featureful, small uTorrent client the world loves will now be "improved" to provide fast dollars for the new owners. And how do you do that these days? Stuff advertsing into your product, turn off advanced features and produce a "pro" version, "encourage" your community to download your commercial stuff, and when they resist then automatically "upgrade" their client for them to follow the new "strategic direction".

      The uTorrent community is the biggest "asset" that BitTorrent bought, just like the BitTorrent community was what MPAA thought it was buying. Now that community will be "leveraged" to provide a significant return on this "investment".

      In short, commericalisation. It is the way of things. Not that I blame or hold a grudge against the authors. They put a lot of work in and why shouldn't they profit. Any developer in their place would do the same. Its business, that's all, just business. But people, particularly on /. get quite righteous about these things.

      The ride was good. Now pay or get off. Capitalism 101.

      --
      We do not inherit the Earth from our parents. We borrow it from our children.
    2. Re:Explanation request by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      Do you fear utorrent will stop being tiny _if_ it's made multiplatform? What motivates that fear?

      Azuerus

  28. I have a dream... by Ximba · · Score: 1

    A dream where people realise there's an enormous difference between u and ...

    --
    [Enter fun stuff here.]
    1. Re:I have a dream... by Ximba · · Score: 1

      Hey, look at that. It disappeared.

      --
      [Enter fun stuff here.]
    2. Re:I have a dream... by gravos · · Score: 1

      Did you mean "between u and mu"?

    3. Re:I have a dream... by mrvan · · Score: 1

      This is actually quite funny, why isn't this a moderator day... :-)

  29. Will they make uTorrent Free? by Tester · · Score: 1

    The only important question is: Will they release uTorrent code as Free Software?

  30. Snore! by noz · · Score: 1
    "[...] uTorrent's exceptionally well-written codebase and robust user community. Bringing together uTorrent's efficient implementation and compelling UI [...]"
    When this is said after acquiring a product, and not before, it's just plain sales. The only missing word is framework. B+
  31. Not called "uTorrent" by wile_e_wonka · · Score: 0, Redundant

    But how do you make the "mu" character show up on Slashdot? I tried, but it didn't work. Taking the "mu" out of the name removes the meaning from the name of the client (I think the idea is to play off "mu" being used as a prefix meaning "micro-" in SI; uTorrent being much lighter than Azureus).

  32. "u"Torrent runs under (unmodified) Wine.. by newr00tic · · Score: 1

    You can run "u"Torrent perfectly under Wine; even by just "wine uTorrent.exe", and nothing more. -"u"Torrent is free, -so is Wine-, so I don't see the problem at all..

    --
    A horse can't be sick, you know, even if he wants to.
  33. Bittorrent software is still free. by jbn-o · · Score: 1
    With Cohen walking hand in hand with the MPAA nowadays, how will this affect the privacy of current Torrent users such as myself?

    Fortunately, the original Bittorrent software is free software so you'll always have the freedom to make sure the software preserves your privacy (insofar as that can be done on a Bittorrent network). The same cannot be said for uTorrent which will remain proprietary.

  34. mommy by anilg · · Score: 1

    Mommy mommy.. why did this have to happen?????! Couldn't the little fairy come down, give the utorrent guy lots of money and stop having utorrent bought out? And maybe give a select few a view of the source!

    --
    http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
  35. stop the madness! by WheresMyDingo · · Score: 5, Funny

    prior to this uTorrent ate nanoTorrent which ate picoTorrent, only moments after femtoTorrent was devoured. we must stop this before there is just one giant torrent walking this earth, devouring everything in its path!

    1. Re:stop the madness! by TheShadowzero · · Score: 2, Funny

      There's always a bigger torrent.

      --
      If history repeats itself, why can't we study the future?
    2. Re:stop the madness! by CmSpuD · · Score: 1

      Na na na na na na na na na na katamari torrency o/`

  36. rtorrent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's all you need!

  37. List of Things to Do... by darkitecture · · Score: 1


    1. Open uTorrent
    2. Click on Options
    3. Click on Preferences
    4. Untick "Check for updates automatically"
    5. ???
    6. Profit.

    1. Re:List of Things to Do... by afz902k · · Score: 1

      And ??? = Burning and selling the stuff you get off the internets..

  38. qbittorrent by illuminatedwax · · Score: 1

    Qbittorrent is an excellent, GPL bittorrent client that is fast, and has a very small footprint. It's in development stages right now, and is only for Linux, but it works very well. .debs are available; you should try it out.

    --
    Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
  39. (idea) Why doesn't google... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    buy BitTorrent and uTorrent and open the source code like they did with google earth?

  40. name merge? by barongas · · Score: 1

    Bttorrent

  41. Three steps program. by ari+wins · · Score: 1

    Options > Preferences > Uncheck the first box.

    --
    Don't worry if you're a kleptomaniac, you can always take something for it.
  42. So, which Bittorrent client is the best? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    So, which Bittorrent client is the best? Azureus is open source. Do you recommend it?

    1. Re:So, which Bittorrent client is the best? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      If you are a Torrent user now, either stick with the version you have now (i.e. don't upgrade), or switch to Azureus. Azureus is a great client as long as you don't try to run games at the same time. But I've heard that if you run Azureus on Linux, you won't have speed issues because the GPL (is it GNU?) implementation of Java is apparently quite the speed demon.

      And since Sun is about to (has already?) open-source Java, expect to see similar speed improvements in the Java client on Windows soon, and thus improvements in Azureus's speed as well.

  43. Emergency Switch? by crhylove · · Score: 1

    Ok, so is there a good FOSS torrent client yet? And by that I mean one that doesn't require me to install JRE, which I will always refuse to do.

    All I use is FOSS, except for utorrent. The latest builds of Shareaza haven't really been working that well for me, so that one is out too....

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    1. Re:Emergency Switch? by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Since you _do_ use more closed software than you mention, and quite a bit of it (namely - Windows), is FOSS aspect really that important?...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
  44. FOSS IS important. by crhylove · · Score: 1

    Other than windows, I use exclusively FOSS software. And I shouldn't have to inform you about the importance of FOSS. There is plenty of information out there already showing how important it is now, and how much more important it will be in the future.

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.