비트토렌트

수학노트
둘러보기로 가기 검색하러 가기

노트

위키데이터

말뭉치

  1. BitTorrent is one of the most common protocols for transferring large files; such as, digital video files containing TV shows and video clips, or digital audio files containing songs.[1]
  2. To send or receive files, a person uses a BitTorrent client, on their Internet-connected computer.[1]
  3. A BitTorrent client is a computer program that implements the BitTorrent protocol.[1]
  4. As of January 2012 , BitTorrent is utilized by 150 million active users.[1]
  5. BitTorrent is a free-to-use, simple, and feature-loaded torrent client for sharing multimedia files via the BitTorrent protocol.[2]
  6. With BitTorrent, you can download or upload multiple files simultaneously, thereby saving a good amount of time.[2]
  7. BitTorrent, the tool, is the official program to share files using this technology.[2]
  8. Currently, BitTorrent handles more than 100 million monthly active users, which accounts for a substantial part of web traffic.[2]
  9. Last April, a pair of cousins named Bob Delamar and Jeremy Johnson became co-CEOs of BitTorrent.[3]
  10. BitTorrent had already tried to be the next Netflix, starting long before Netflix had become the next Netflix.[3]
  11. BitTorrent — the protocol — was a genius way to transmit large amounts of information over the net by breaking it into small chunks, sending it through a peer-to-peer network, and reassembling it.[3]
  12. BitTorrent — the company — got started on the assumption that Cohen was brilliant.[3]
  13. Much like http (hypertext transfer protocol) and ftp (file transfer protocol), BitTorrent is a way to download files from the internet.[4]
  14. BitTorrent peer-to-peer (P2P) protocol finds users with files other users want and then downloads pieces of the files from those users simultaneously.[4]
  15. In 2005, estimates indicated BitTorrent accounted for about 35 percent of all internet traffic.[4]
  16. BitTorrent is a legitimate file transfer protocol, and using it — called torrenting — is legal as long as the content can be downloaded or uploaded legally.[4]
  17. A torrent file acts like a table of contents (index) that allows computers to find information through the use of a Bittorrent client.[5]
  18. A torrent file gives addresses identifying computers that can send parts of the requested file.[5]
  19. With the help of a torrent file, one can download small parts of the original file from computers that have already downloaded it.[5]
  20. Many free/freeware programs and operating systems, such as the various Linux distributions and GIMP, offer a torrent download option for users seeking the aforementioned benefits.[5]
  21. Since its acquisition, BitTorrent has added various new tools, with a dedicated native cryptocurrency token, BTT, released in February 2019.[6]
  22. In 2018, TRON completed its acquisition of BitTorrent, bringing BitTorrent under the control of Justin Sun.[6]
  23. TRON is also behind the addition of cryptocurrency to BitTorrent, as the BTT token was released on TRON’s blockchain.[6]
  24. The BitTorrent team and umbrella organization, the BitTorrent Foundation, were awarded 19% of the supply.[6]
  25. Find, download (torrent) & play torrents on your phone or tablet with the official BitTorrent® App for Android.[7]
  26. ✔ Downloaded more than one music file in a torrent?[7]
  27. µTorrent downloads files at high speeds using the BitTorrent hyper distribution communications protocol for peer-to-peer file sharing (""P2P"").[8]
  28. Fast, light, and powerful: that’s the core of our torrent download technology.[8]
  29. With the help of CoinPayments.net, a leading integrated payment gateway provider for cryptocurrencies, BUSD joins TRX, BNB, BTC, BTT, and OKB as the sixth cryptocurrency accepted by BitTorrent.[9]
  30. "Today we are pleased to accept BUSD as another digital payment option for Classic Pro for both BitTorrent and µTorrent users,” said Justin Sun, Founder of TRON and CEO of BitTorrent.[9]
  31. BUSD users may purchase one-year subscriptions of BitTorrent or µTorrent Classic products, including Pro, Ad-Free, and Pro+VPN for Windows.[9]
  32. “We are thrilled to work with BitTorrent to offer BUSD, a NYDFS regulated stablecoin as one of the main payment options for purchasing Classic Pro.[9]
  33. BitTorrent is an open, peer-to-peer protocol for distributing files.[10]
  34. You can use the BitTorrent protocol to retrieve any publicly-accessible object in Amazon S3.[10]
  35. Amazon S3 supports the BitTorrent protocol so that developers can save costs when distributing content at high scale.[10]
  36. A "leecher" is a BitTorrent client downloading, who then becomes a seed for someone else.[11]
  37. Each BitTorrent user becomes a source for another user who wants the same file.[11]
  38. The BitTorrent client balances the load on the user's computer because downloading is faster than uploading.[11]
  39. Widely used to transfer pirated movies and software, BitTorrent and other file sharing systems accounted for more than half of Internet traffic around the turn of the century.[11]
  40. You will need a BitTorrent client to download Debian CD/DVD images this way.[12]
  41. The Debian distribution includes BitTornado, KTorrent and the original BitTorrent tools.[12]
  42. BitTorrent is a protocol that enables fast downloading of large files using minimum Internet bandwidth.[13]
  43. Unlike other download methods, BitTorrent maximizes transfer speed by gathering pieces of the file you want and downloading these pieces simultaneously from people who already have them.[13]
  44. In this article, we'll examine how BitTorrent works and how it is different from other file-distribution methods.[13]
  45. To understand how BitTorrent works and why it is different from other file-serving methods, let's examine what happens when you download a file from a Web site.[13]
  46. BitTorrent, protocol for sharing large computer files over the Internet.[14]
  47. However, BitTorrent can also work without the existence of a seed; a group of peers can share pieces of a file as long as they have among them all the pieces of the original complete file.[14]
  48. Many file-sharing Web sites are based on BitTorrent because of its efficient use of bandwidth.[14]
  49. The entertainment industry has mounted an active legal campaign against those sites that use BitTorrent to share files of copyrighted material.[14]
  50. From your geeky roommates who eat up your internet connection at all hours of the night to your luddite family members, nearly everyone knows what BitTorrent is nowadays.[15]
  51. What makes the BitTorrent protocol unique is that it distributes the sharing of files across all users who have downloaded or are in the process of downloading a file.[15]
  52. Because BitTorrent breaks up and distributes files in hundreds of small chunks, you don’t even need to have downloaded the whole file before you start sharing.[15]
  53. Without a BitTorrent client, you can’t partake in the peer-to-peer protocol.[15]
  54. Despite the advantages for BitTorrent users, it can unfairly consume access link bandwidth from other user(s) and applications.[16]
  55. We have used a detailed model of the BitTorrent protocol to analyze its performance and impact on real-time video traffic.[16]
  56. We have shown that increasing the number of BitTorrent clients and/or upload connections can cause a decrease in download rate due to delayed TCP acknowledgements.[16]
  57. We also show the effect of access router buffer size on performance: too small reduces BitTorrent’s upload rate, too large increases video jitter and delay.[16]
  58. Bittorrent on the other hand requests "random" parts of the file from N number of peers and it can typically download several parts at once from different sources.[17]
  59. A bittorrent transfer to you is very likely to reach you over other users' uplinks.[17]
  60. With bittorrent you're getting each individual part limited by the uplink speed of that user who has that part.[17]
  61. Bittorrent needs to go out and connect to multiple remote machines.[17]
  62. BitTorrent Web is available for both Windows and macOS, and is the standard client used to download content.[18]
  63. Apart from the adverts on the basic version, the interface is neat and streamlined, making it one of the best torrent clients to go with in terms of minimalist design.[18]
  64. Impressive performance levels help to make for an enjoyable experience, and on an overall level, BitTorrent is very easy to understand and use.[18]
  65. Furthermore, scanning the BitTorrent installer with VirusTotal flagged up 4 warnings (out of 72 antivirus apps), which is not a large amount, but at the same time, may be a slight concern.[18]
  66. Aside from being a peer-to-peer file transfer protocol, BitTorrent is also the name of the official software used to connect to the BitTorrent network.[19]
  67. BitTorrent hadn't seen a major update in about two years, but that was before it bought out uTorrent.[19]
  68. Previously, BT had lacked features that other torrent innovators had spent time testing and investing in.[19]
  69. Now, in one fell swoop, BT has access to everything it lacked.[19]
  70. BitTorrent is a protocol for distributing files.[20]
  71. Associate the extension .torrent with mimetype application/x-bittorrent on their web server (or have done so already).[20]
  72. Install BitTorrent (or have done so already).[20]
  73. (BitTorrent prior to version 3.2 uses 2 20 = 1 M as default).[20]
  74. We are a torrent client and aim to protect you against lawyer-based attacks and censorship.[21]
  75. BitTorrent is a type of peer-to-peer (P2P) network, which enables users to share files over the internet.[22]
  76. BitTorrent is was created by programmer Bram Cohen, and is designed to distribute large files efficiently.[22]
  77. BitTorrent clients are programs which implement the BitTorrent protocol.[22]
  78. To begin with, a torrent file (file extension ‘.torrent’) is created and contains information such as what file is being shared, and what tracker is associated with it.[22]
  79. BitTorrent's protocol has been described as a "swarming, scatter and gather" file transfer protocol.[23]
  80. Bram Cohen wrote BitTorrent in Python and made it available in 2001.[23]
  81. BitTorrent is distributed freely under an open source license.[23]
  82. In April 2001, Cohen quit MojoNation and began work on BitTorrent.[24]
  83. BitTorrent gained its fame for its ability to quickly share large music and movie files online.[24]
  84. BitTorrent is a protocol that offloads some of the file tracking work to a central server (called a tracker).[24]
  85. With BitTorrent, the more files you share with others, the faster your downloads are.[24]
  86. We’ve begun to use BitTorrent for index distribution, and we’ll soon use it for build distribution as well.[25]
  87. In this post, we discuss our experience with BitTorrent and the problem of package distribution within the enterprise environment.[25]
  88. BT splits the packages into pieces that are shared between the peers.[25]
  89. Before BT transfers can be initiated, the “.torrent” file is distributed to the peers using HTTP, SCP, or other client/server means.[25]

소스

메타데이터

위키데이터

Spacy 패턴 목록

  • [{'LEMMA': 'BitTorrent'}]
  • [{'LEMMA': 'BT'}]
  • [{'LOWER': 'bit'}, {'LEMMA': 'torrent'}]
  • [{'LEMMA': 'torrent'}]