

Sure I guess you will be the first to cap the speed or give up and go elsewhere. Think Video serving is good then how about we all have repeat play on all your videos 24/7.
#UDP CONNECTION TIMED OUT RETROSHARE SOFTWARE#
But the network and software it is shared on has to be secure and with no limitations, not abused by ratio, percentages and ability to used for video serving. Yes people have this and more I'm certain to share. Imagine multi TB storage been shared by millions of people. I'm sure if this was so then everyone would share their files and what a mass collection that would be. What we all need is true decentralized secure P2P but one that we can trust and work for us. P2P has suffered greatly for many reasons over the years and the latest above doesn't help.
#UDP CONNECTION TIMED OUT RETROSHARE PC#
To the point everyone PC becomes part of many large media servers which in turn can be connected to everything serving millions of people those videos, audio etc.

Multiply this across many users and you see the issue is greater. Then they site and upload forever the player has the complete videos from those 10 people. Take 10 people with same video give each a percentage of that video and then limit their download for more to nil. Which means a video can keep uploading for days with very little download. Then there is also no control for the Media video players or sites they are linked to. Also no ratio based system is going to be 100% all of the time it can be wrong and user cannot do anything about it. I assumes no one uploads and so penalizes. But this is pointless without (1) or (2) above.įopnu could be the biggest development in p2p since bittorrent, true p2p anonymous sharing, but as it is it's a dead duck. But "the internet needs it".Ģ) More interaction between dev(s) and users, there's practically none that I can see.ģ) More 'marketing' on social media etc. This goes against the original ethos of p2p file sharing, and necessitates hassles with packaging torrents etc.įopnu is/could be the antidote to all this, and yet hardly anyone is using it.ġ) Open Source? I'm guessing not, the dev(s) have invested many hours in Tixati and now Fopnu. The anti-pirate brigade got wise to all of these and drove file sharing to the situation it is now of exclusive, invite-only torrent sites. Originally (90's) there were BBS, then FTP, then (for music) Napster and Audio Galaxy, then Bittorrent. By wares I don't mean the latest albums or films, I mean hard to get information like magazines, ancient documentaries, bootleg music, out of print books, photography collections, artwork scans, ROM collections, maps etc. There's a huge population out there of people who hoard, and then want to share, their wares. And yet, strangely, it seems being held back by the very developer(s) that make it! :(
