As you might gather from the topic title, when I turned my PC on this morning I found that on of the files I was downloading last night has totally vanished. I know for a fact that the partial file was there late night since I opened it with AVI preview and it was in no danger of being completed (about 10% complete). Now the computer did get a little funky and had to be restarted last night so I think that might have something to do with it, but I don't know what. I've checked the recycle bin just in case and run a search on the hard drive to no avail, I vaguely recall the scandisk saying something about truncating files during the restart but it flashed by so fast I didn't get a chance to really see what it was all about. This has really naffed me off since it's taken me a week just to download this much and I'd really appreciate it if anyone here can suggest what might have happened and how to get my file back. Cheers.
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Well if the file doesn't automatically spring back in "Traffic" it has been dropped, you have to track down the host carrying it again.
Personally, my advice would be to just uninsrall Kazaa and reinstall it, the latest version. Or Kazaa-lite, I hear it's good, less RAM-thirsty.
Your Scandisk has opinions about your comp at every startup? Sounds like your comp needs some R&R.
Also, what kind of connection do you have if it takes you a week to download? ISDN? Or, perhaps more vital, what are you downloading? Televised operas? Satellite photos of the northern hemisphere?
In that case, I can recommend "Othello" and "Alaska", in said order. They're very nice.
I cancel every download over 500Mb that gets a download speed of less than 100K/S. I hate having to keep the computer on while sleeping, it makes me uncomfortable with its noise.
I broke that rule yesterday, when downloading Part 2 of 2 of Van Wilder (hey, that colon-blow scene is the funny) and the download stayed at a steady 60K/S, with 4 more hours to go. So I let the computer be, went to bed. I woke up the next day, went to the bathroom and then the kitchen, so as not to jinx it, and when I finally turned on the monitor, that goddamn file had jumped down to 0.68K/S during the night, it still had 3 hours 50 mins to go.
So none of that shit again.
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
quote:Well if the file doesn't automatically spring back in "Traffic" it has been dropped, you have to track down the host carrying it again.
That's never happened to me before, usually it just stays on "more soures needed" or "Remotely queued" until it picks up a connection (which sometimes takes weeks.)
quote:Personally, my advice would be to just uninsrall Kazaa and reinstall it, the latest version. Or Kazaa-lite, I hear it's good, less RAM-thirsty.
I'm running Kazaa Lite K++ 2.4.3, which I'm pretty sure is the newest version going.
quote:Your Scandisk has opinions about your comp at every startup? Sounds like your comp needs some R&R.
Only when it freezes on me and I have to hit the restart button.
quote:Also, what kind of connection do you have if it takes you a week to download? ISDN? Or, perhaps more vital, what are you downloading? Televised operas? Satellite photos of the northern hemisphere?
A 56K modem. There is no broadband where I live, that I'm aware of. Plus the computer isn't on all the time, more often than not I can only trust it to be on for a few hours at a time, unattended. (I got a nasty phone bill a few months back which I think was caused by a dialer that found it's way onto my machine somehow.)
I'm actually downloading episodes of Justice League, if you must know.
quote:I cancel every download over 500Mb that gets a download speed of less than 100K/S. I hate having to keep the computer on while sleeping, it makes me uncomfortable with its noise.
I broke that rule yesterday, when downloading Part 2 of 2 of Van Wilder (hey, that colon-blow scene is the funny) and the download stayed at a steady 60K/S, with 4 more hours to go. So I let the computer be, went to bed. I woke up the next day, went to the bathroom and then the kitchen, so as not to jinx it, and when I finally turned on the monitor, that goddamn file had jumped down to 0.68K/S during the night, it still had 3 hours 50 mins to go.
The best speed I ever got out of this thing was 10Kbs, and that was only for about two minutes! It averages around 1.6 usually.
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
do you people have broadband? My top is at the most 4kbps. atm it's 0.5!
Sucks while trying to download these final few Enterprise episodes... (400MB). I'm using Dial-up of course.
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Yeah, usually my speed centers around 10-20Kb/s, and that's okay for small things like Movie Sounds or songs, but if I'm lucky and there's a user from Stockholm with the same connection as I, I can get a speed between 50-100Kb. That only happens once every 30 downloads or so.
Reverend: Your Kazaalite is good and I'm glad to hear it just burps when there's a lockup.
Posted by Cartman (Member # 256) on :
Don't bother with those ~400MB .mpg files, as their image quality is shit. Download only the ~80MB divx5's or the ~350MB HDTV rips.
Anyway, Scandisk leaves truncated data in the root directory of your drive (X:\) with names like filexxxx.chk, so rename a few to .avi (or whatever the extension was) and see if MediaPlayer will swallow them.
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
Ok, I think it's toast. From the help file --> Kazaa Lite deletes my dat files
When your computer crashes or shuts down due to power failure, it can happen that some of your partial downloads (.dat files) get corrupted. If the part where all the essential details of the file (name, hash, checksum, size, sources) are stored gets messed up, then Kazaa Lite is not able to resume the file. Once Kazaa Lite encounters such a broken file, it will delete the file.
Crashes are often hardware related (wrong/old drivers, incompatibilities between hardware). So make sure all your drivers are up-to-date. Also keep your software up-to-date. A stable Operating System such as Windows 2000 or XP can help a lot to prevent crashes.
Otherwise there is no other solution than making backups of big dat files once in a while, so that you don't have to start the download all over again.
Looks like I'll have to start again. Bugger. On the bright side it was a new episode when I started the download last week so there should be more souces to download from by now. Not that I ever seam to get to use more than 2 sources at a time, even when the search lists something like 12 users that have the file. Grr.
Posted by Jason Abbadon (Member # 882) on :
quote:Originally posted by Nim the Fanciful:
In that case, I can recommend "Othello" and "Alaska", in said order. They're very nice.
Enlighten me please (privately if Charles finds this discussion of copyright circumvention worrisome).
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
I won't fly offtopic for long to answer that. "Othello" is Giuseppe Verdi's opera version of Shakespeare's play with the same name, and "Alaska" is a nice, sprawling piece of land in the northern hemisphere. Both are nice to look at. Other nice operas; "The Barber in Sevilla", "Comes the turnip" and of course "Carmen", although the last one isn't as easily appreciated as it is famous, not necessarily recommended for first-timers. "Barber" I can recommend, though. Other nice landstrips on the northern hemisphere; Nova Scotia, Iceland, Sweden, Oceania.
Cartman: I shall take your advice to heart.
Posted by Cartman (Member # 256) on :
And don't cancel your downloads just because they're momentarily slow. Right-clicking on them and polishing the "find more sources" knob every hour or so helps a lot. And you don't have to keep your computer on while sleeping either. Just close KL and turn it off and resume downloading the next day. And eat your turnips.
Posted by Jason Abbadon (Member # 882) on :
quote:Originally posted by Nim the Fanciful: I won't fly offtopic for long to answer that. "Othello" is Giuseppe Verdi's opera version of Shakespeare's play with the same name, and "Alaska" is a nice, sprawling piece of land in the northern hemisphere. Both are nice to look at. Other nice operas; "The Barber in Sevilla", "Comes the turnip" and of course "Carmen", although the last one isn't as easily appreciated as it is famous, not necessarily recommended for first-timers. "Barber" I can recommend, though. Other nice landstrips on the northern hemisphere; Nova Scotia, Iceland, Sweden, Oceania.
Well, not Sweden: They're a buncha marys.
Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
quote:Originally posted by Cartman: Don't bother with those ~400MB .mpg files, as their image quality is shit. Download only the ~80MB divx5's or the ~350MB HDTV rips.
Yeah I got "The Forgotten" in 350MB HDTV - was nice - but the sound unsynched everynow and then. For the sake of 50MB though...
The 80MB are watchable - but barely so.
Posted by Futurama Guy (Member # 968) on :
350MB on dial-up?
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Jason: "Well, not Sweden: They're a buncha marys. *Hahaha-Snort-snort-snort-haha*"
In the history of Flare, I don't think anyone has been this low on material. Take a few days off, read some books by Jerome K. Jerome (I recommend "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow"), maybe jog to the next state, then we can all enjoy being smeared by some of your newfound sarcasm and irony.
Posted by Topher (Member # 71) on :
Hey, you reccomend Nova Scotia but not New Brunswick? NB is so much better than NS
Posted by Chase Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
New Brunswick smells like urine.
Go go Annapolis Valley!
Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
quote:Originally posted by Nim the Fanciful: Personally, my advice would be to just uninsrall Kazaa and reinstall it, the latest version. Or Kazaa-lite, I hear it's good, less RAM-thirsty.
Kazaa-lite isn't good because it's less "RAM-thirsty". It's good because it doesn't drown your system in evil, evil spyware.
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
OK, I have a question about Canada: when we were flying over en route to LA, in early April, there was still a lot of snow and ice we could see from the plane. But there were also these huge wide markings on the landscape that looked like channels that went on for miles, absolutely straight. Anyone know what those were?
Posted by Chase Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
Drainage ditches. So that the snow runoff doesn't flood the countryside and farmland.
Posted by Topher (Member # 71) on :
Never having been in that part of Canada myself, I'd have to take his word for it. Which is scary.
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Well, Magness would have to know all about drainage in the lower fields, he has to look after his acres and award-winning landmark log structure, former 1860's government-sanctioned brothel.
Reverend, are you having any progress with that missing .DAT file? I'm almost out of material here, I might not be able to hold them off for much longer.
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
The dat file is toasted, I've started downloading from scratch. *mopes*
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
How wide are they? They look bloody huge from 35,000 feet.
Posted by Jason Abbadon (Member # 882) on :
quote:Originally posted by Nim the Fanciful: Jason: "Well, not Sweden: They're a buncha marys. *Hahaha-Snort-snort-snort-haha*"
In the history of Flare, I don't think anyone has been this low on material. Take a few days off, read some books by Jerome K. Jerome (I recommend "Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow"), maybe jog to the next state, then we can all enjoy being smeared by some of your newfound sarcasm and irony.
I'm taking five days off (fun and loathing in the hospital) so I need to get my shots in now.
By the way- Ikea! HAW!
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
So you're now officially a graduate of the Ultra Magnus School Of Being Just Plain Nasty To People Under The Guise of Humour?
Posted by Chase Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
I'd say I love you really, but knowing your tastes it'd only encourage you.
Posted by Chase Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
See?!
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Maybe if we created a subfolder for him on the Flare computer, he could emanate this golden delicious bliss so that it reached out to everyone.
Computer\Admin\StationConfigs\Pup
Posted by JC Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
Aw, now you made him cry. Carry on. 8)
Posted by Elim Garak (Member # 14) on :
Going back a little...
I don't have dat file.
And Topher's right about New Brunswick.
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
Well I've never seen an action movie set in New Brunswick, so to me it and its people are fable.
Posted by Topher (Member # 71) on :
Starhunter was filmed in New Brunswick.
Posted by Nim the Fanciful (Member # 205) on :
There you go. What is Starhunter? (I say that rhetorically, I will naturally go check it out on imdb immediately, who today wouldn't? That's a shame with the new internet, post Y2K, there are few questions about books, movies or general thingies that I can suitably ask you people on this forum, that I can't or shouldn't check with Google or fansites of said thingie in advance... Hmm, I had more, I have to continue this point outside the parantheses.) Nngh. There. You know what, Topher, fuck sloth and habit. I won't go to imdb.com for the answer, you may tell me here and now what Starhunter is about, sir, and I shall listen with interest. Like the good old days.
Posted by JC Ultra Magnus (Member # 239) on :
I totally was on the set of Starhunter for a weekend. Canadian Science Fiction is like, the least fun thing to make, from what I saw. I'm pretty sure the entire crew were homeless Acadians. They also totally did not check their light balance, either, and used a halogen bulb in the same scene as a window. WITHOUT ANY FILTERS!
What is that sort of breaded doughy food that the Acadians are famous for?
I learnt about it Grade 7 French Immersion, but I totally forgot.
Posted by Topher (Member # 71) on :
Not too sure what that's called. I forget at the moment.
Starhunter, from what I recall, is about a bounty hunter and his crew on a ship named after a flower. Never saw the show, actually.