Hi :)
Torrenting is built-in to most Gnu&Linux systems and most have a default 
torrenting-client built-in.  

However until you actually try it yourself it's a bit scary.  It sounds like a 
normal download (so why not stick to that, right?) except for some weird thing 
where outsiders somehow have access to stuff on your machine.  Doesn't that 
mean they can plonk what they like onto your machine? (NO.).  Also it seems 
quite complicated because you download this tiny file and then that's it?  How 
come the normal download is so much larger and why can't the tiny torrent just 
double-click to install LO!!?  It's trying to open some other program!  wtf!  
Does that mean i've been hacked already!!!?

Also people say this or that torrenting client is a nightmare and you MUST use 
a different one and then go off on some weird techie chat about weird esoteric 
stuff.  This is especially worrying in Windows where you have to try to figure 
out which torrenting client, how to set it up, what's going on etc.  


Truth is.  
1.  Just like i was saying about Anchor points yday you can use any of the 
torrenting clients to get the result you want.  You can't really make a 'wrong' 
choice.  Once you have used one for a while or tried a few you start to learn 
things and want certain features and are not impressed with others.  That's 
when you start finessing down to a particular torrenting client.  Before that 
they all work in very much the same way and achieve much the same results.  

2.  That little tiny file is made to tell the torrenting client exactly what to 
download and what to allow to be uploaded from your machine.  Everything else 
is still blocked.  It can't be used as a tunnel onto your machine to do 
anything other than deal with the single thing you are trying to download.  

3.  The other program that opens when you double-click on that tiny download is 
the torrenting-client.  That then communicates with headquarters to ask for the 
download to start.  HQ looks up who has parts of the download file.  Your 
torrenting clients starts taking parts from everyone it can, grabbing more from 
the ones that can give it fastest (usually people that are nearest).  As it 
goes it keeps checking that you are only getting bits that belong to the file.  
It's constantly doing the equivalent of Md5sum (or Sha) checking for you.  
Anything slightly weird gets rejected and reported to HQ.  

4.  When you have a few bits of the puzzle your torrenting client starts 
offering outsiders those parts, NOT any other random other thing on your 
machine.  It's made specifically to deal with the file in question.  If your 
machine was heavily infected it doesn't want to accidentally pass any of that 
on so it tightly focusses on just the file it's been asked to deal with.  The 
upshot is that you start dishing out that file to anyone else that is nearby so 
their download starts getting faster.  If new people join they will be getting 
parts you don't have yet and those become available to your client so your 
download gets faster and faster too.  

Normal downloading means downloading from just 1 place.  If that is in Romania 
and you are in the US then it's likely to be slow.  If you are in New Zealand 
then even slower.  Sometimes you get a choice of "mirrors" to download from but 
how do you choose?  What if that mirror is having troubles today?  What if it's 
daytime and the mirror is dealing with millions of requests?  

So torrenting is faster because it automatically chooses all the fastest places 
to download from and spreads the load between them.  If one slows down it 
automatically switches to using others.  

Plus if you get part-way through a download and need to reboot or switch you 
machine off or if you close the torrenting client then the parts you already 
have are kept and logged in that tiny little file.  When you switch on again 
the client checks all the parts you have to make sure they are all perfect and 
then resumes downloading.  I know Firefox, probably Chrome, Opera and others 
also do something like that but torrenting is mare careful about security and 
about being perfect.  


Generally after downloading by torrent i try to repay the system by allowing my 
file to be used to help others upload.  Some people limit that to until 2x the 
file size has been uploaded from your machine.  So downloaded once, uploaded 
twice.  I generally just change the default settings to let it  upload as much 
as it wants.  But i don't have the torrenting client open very often so it's 
not always uploading.  Sometimes i end up uploading a pitifully small amount 
and feel really guilty that i didn't repay enough.  Others i upload the file 10 
times and feel great.  Once or twice i have been told that my part is no longer 
perfect and wont be used anymore but that's generally when the headquarters for 
that download has been taken down (eg Wolvix stopped developing so publicly due 
to Wolven's wife having a baby and suddenly Wolven didn't have so much free 
time to develop, openSUSE released a newer version so their ancient one got 
taken off)  


So, if you are on Windows and need to choose a torrenting client just choose 
any of them, for now.  Later on you can choose a different one and that will 
pick up on all the downloads you have going at that time.  For now, until you 
work out what you really want from a torrenting client just go with any of 
them.  

If you are on Gnu&Linux similarly, just stick with the default one until you 
know what you want.  I've always been happy with the default one.  In Ubuntu 
12.04 that is "Transmission BitTorrent".  I'm not sure if the Windows version 
of that one is better or worse or about the same [shrugs].  


So, like LO itself you will hear a lot of FUD out there about which is best or 
whether it's a good thing to do or not.  All i can say is i was very paranoid 
and wary about it at first but now i use it a lot because it's much faster and 
safer (also like LO).  

It is just a tool though and all tools can be used for bad purposes so 
doubtless people use it for porn or illegal copying of hollywood movies and all 
the rest but it's your choice what you use it for.  Just use it for the files 
you want.  Don't let yourself get side-tracked into choosing downloads you 
don't want!  But that's true of normal downloading too.  It's just faster to go 
astray with torrenting because it downloads faster.  
Regards from 
Tom :)  





----- Original Message -----
> From: Tim Lloyd <[email protected]>
> To: 
> Cc: [email protected]
> Sent: Tuesday, 14 May 2013, 4:21
> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Downloader Not Working
> 
> just a reminder that LO can be downloaded via the bit torrent where I 
> can see 13 seeds for the Fedora version alone.
> 
> If possible, don't put a strain on the LO servers, use the bit torrent 
> and then seed back to allow other users to download :)
> 
> Cheers
> 
> On 05/14/2013 01:09 PM, Scott Castaline wrote:
>>  -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>  Hash: SHA1
>> 
>>  On 05/13/2013 06:39 PM, Mark LaPierre wrote:
>>>  Hey All,
>>> 
>>>  I get a 404 error from the libre office download server.  I've
>>>  tried from two different Win XP machines and from my CentOS
>>>  machine.  All are running Fire Fox.
>>> 
>>>  I tried to download the Win version and the linux version.  Both
>>>  just got me a 404 error.
>>> 
>>>  Is anyone else having a problem with the downloader or is it just
>>>  me?
>>> 
>>  I have already updated to 4.03 yesterday, but I just tried accessing
>>  it now and it (stopped at downloading prompt) seems fine, at least for
>>  Linux.
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> 
> 
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