This topic is simply on the issues of inner workings of uTorrent I have noticed.
I recently got a file that hung on 99.6% and found a source for an identical file in another torrent.
By simply starting this other torrent, then closing the utorrent gui (exit, not minimize) I cut and pasted the 99.6% completed on top of the new target file.
Then restart utorrent and force recheck to get the file to actually accept the new content. This results in that I now have completed 99.6% of the new just loaded file.
The funny thing that happened as a side effect to this way of using utorrent was the following.
The whole file is 1.75GB
The rest to load was less than 8 MB.
Upon completing the 8 MB in less than 10 seconds, I noticed that the "shared upload quota" was specifying having seeded ratio 0.935 or 93.5% of what I had downloaded.
This implies uTorrent counts the ratio based on downloaded volume in bytes and not download size of the whole file.
In all fairness, I don't think its just to claim the file was shared 0.935 but rather 0.00935 in this case
Just an interesting way to review the sharing ratio which I have seen been the topic of many discussions on forums such as A-O.
see attached screen cap for an example of the skew described.
I recently got a file that hung on 99.6% and found a source for an identical file in another torrent.
By simply starting this other torrent, then closing the utorrent gui (exit, not minimize) I cut and pasted the 99.6% completed on top of the new target file.
Then restart utorrent and force recheck to get the file to actually accept the new content. This results in that I now have completed 99.6% of the new just loaded file.
The funny thing that happened as a side effect to this way of using utorrent was the following.
The whole file is 1.75GB
The rest to load was less than 8 MB.
Upon completing the 8 MB in less than 10 seconds, I noticed that the "shared upload quota" was specifying having seeded ratio 0.935 or 93.5% of what I had downloaded.
This implies uTorrent counts the ratio based on downloaded volume in bytes and not download size of the whole file.
In all fairness, I don't think its just to claim the file was shared 0.935 but rather 0.00935 in this case
Just an interesting way to review the sharing ratio which I have seen been the topic of many discussions on forums such as A-O.
see attached screen cap for an example of the skew described.