How to Increase Torrents Speed - Change Half Open TCP Connection Limit In Windows XP SP3
Few months back, i published a post on How to Optimize Torrent Client for Faster Torrent Download Speeds. The post explained what is Half Open Connection limit in windows and how to increase the torrent download speed by changing half open TCP connection limits on Windows XP SP2.
If you are new to torrent world then you should first check this post How to download movies, software, tv shows and many more using Torrents and then come continue reading this post.
This post shows you How to Optimize Torrent Download speed on Windows XP SP3. (If you are using Windows XP SP2 then read this post Optimize Torrent Client for Faster Torrent Download Speeds)
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How to Optimize Torrent Client for Faster Torrent Download Speeds
If you are new to torrent world then you should first check this post How to download movies, software, tv shows and many more using Torrents and then come continue reading this post.
I going to show a tweak to increase the torrent download speed.
I think most of them have come across some tweaks to make Internet Connection Faster, But they don’t work or has very little difference in speeds.
In my previous post How to download movies, software, tv shows and many more using Torrents, I mentioned to check seeders count and leachers count before you start the download. Even though the torrent have more seeders, the download speed was not crossing 50KBps.
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How to download movies, software, tv shows and many more using Torrents
Today, i am going tell what is torrent all about and a guide to download files using Torrents.
What is Torrent ?
Torrent is also called as BitTorrent. Torrent is a technology that is used to distribute large amounts of data widely without incurring the corresponding consumption in costly server and bandwidth resources. It is a Peer to Peer P2P technology.
More on this at Torrent
More explanation to non-techies:
As i said before, Torrent is P2P technology. It enables us to share files with our peers. Suppose A has a file and wants to share it with others. Using Torrents, B can download the file from A’s computer. Now, if C wants to download it, he can do it from A and B as B has the file too. Now if another user D wants to download it, he can do it from A, B and C. Even if A stops sharing it (this can happen when A goes off from the network, switches off his computer or intentionally wants to stop sharing it), D can still download it from B and C.



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