Only bad thing about it for most of you is that it only is a windows version. However it is not owned by a company at all so there are no single place that anyone can go to "shut it down". It searches all of the Gnutella networks for your files that you are searching for. It is pretty powerfull IMHO.
It is an open source P2P system with a download area for the source code, so all you Linux junkies out there I am sure can morph it into a Linux version.:-)
I am currently a senior in college getting a degree next may. For the past two years I have been working for a department at my school as a sys-admin. It is great, I overlook the operations of a few servers and 100+ Windows/Unix boxes (by myself with no assistance). This is one of the best environments to be in. First off with this being such a paper oriented world now a days, companies first look at your GPA. So in turn your work helps you with experience in the areas that you are studying helping you with your "all important" GPA. Second you have school that helps you with your work, if you learn something new in class then you can apply it to your work and see how it works in the real world. This helps your experience level go through the roof. Employers love that. Consider going to school and sys-admining, it is well worth it. Most of the time you are only allowed to work 20 hours a week also (even though I put in upwards of 50 a week wail going to school full time) but I love my job and it is making school more enjoyable at the same time.
My brother has been playing Clarinet since he was 9 and he has developed CTS so it does happen in musicians as well.
You guys might want to try gnucleus.
:-)
Only bad thing about it for most of you is that it only is a windows version. However it is not owned by a company at all so there are no single place that anyone can go to "shut it down". It searches all of the Gnutella networks for your files that you are searching for. It is pretty powerfull IMHO.
It is an open source P2P system with a download area for the source code, so all you Linux junkies out there I am sure can morph it into a Linux version.
I am currently a senior in college getting a degree next may. For the past two years I have been working for a department at my school as a sys-admin. It is great, I overlook the operations of a few servers and 100+ Windows/Unix boxes (by myself with no assistance). This is one of the best environments to be in. First off with this being such a paper oriented world now a days, companies first look at your GPA. So in turn your work helps you with experience in the areas that you are studying helping you with your "all important" GPA. Second you have school that helps you with your work, if you learn something new in class then you can apply it to your work and see how it works in the real world. This helps your experience level go through the roof. Employers love that. Consider going to school and sys-admining, it is well worth it. Most of the time you are only allowed to work 20 hours a week also (even though I put in upwards of 50 a week wail going to school full time) but I love my job and it is making school more enjoyable at the same time.