Thanks, that was very helpful. Once I type in a query, does the client keep searching indefinitely, else how do I know when it's done? -chris
On 12 Sep 2000, mike wrote: > Well i just ran gnutella and d/l some mp3 files.to check it > myself. > Just get a server list from zeropaid.com and paste it > into the line next to the add button on the gnutellaNet > page and click add. This immediately brings up the hosts- > connectioned. I try to get at least 10 connections up and > running. > Then go to the search page and type mp3 into the > search field and click the search button. On my cable > connection i get a full page of files listed within a few > seconds. > Make your selections and click d/l . Select a bunch all > at once since some will fail due to time outs and must > be restarted. Dont forget a lot of the connections are limited > to 28kbs . > The netstats on the first page will show how big the > catch is e.g. 181 hosts; 1680998260 files ; 330.4 GB. If > the net is very busy things run a bit slow so i just run it > in the background and check it occasionally.YMMV. > > > > On Tue, 12 Sep 2000 14:11:58 -0700 (PDT), Krzys Majewski said: > > > OK I've rtfm'ed to the best of my ability, and I still have no > > idea how to make gtk_gnutella do anything interesting. It does > > run, but "search" does nothing. Maybe I have to edit the > > ..gtk_gnutella/hosts file? Tried that. Maybe you can just tell > > me what you did.. > > thanks > > chris > > > > On 12 Sep 2000, mike wrote: > > > > > In my first post i forget to mention you can just apt-get > > > gtk-gnutella and read the tutorial at gnutella.wego.com. > > > > > > > So we are now agreed that gnapster bit it, yes? > > > > Can someone who has just been through this post a brief > > > > summary of the procedure for replacing gnapster (notably, what > > > > to replace it with). I tried knapster a while back but I never > > > > managed to install the right libs for it (I'm not running kde > > > > fwiw) > > > > thanks > > > > chris > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null >