|
||
|
|
|||||||
| Welcome to the Exploding Garrmondo Weiner Interactive Swiss Army Penis. |
|
GFF is a community of gaming and music enthusiasts. We have a team of dedicated moderators, constant member-organized activities, and plenty of custom features, including our unique journal system. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ or our GFWiki. You will have to register before you can post. Membership is completely free (and gets rid of the pesky advertisement unit underneath this message).
|
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools |
Use IsoBuster, it can extract files from optical media without using the standard Windows file access routines. Ensures a perfect copy.
How ya doing, buddy? |
Some note: You can do this if you don't trust the Windows file access implementation. The Windows implementation should however also detect when a sector could not be read from the optical media (that's why there are EDC and ECC fields).
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
That would be easy: Setup a local tracker on your machine with seeding capabilities (like Azureus, I think it should do it). Then use another client (or try running 2 instances of Azureus) to download from the local client.
If you want to use only one tool you can setup Azureus A on your normal machine, then create a VM. In the VM you setup Azureus B and download from the host machine. This should only result in loopback traffic. So you're only limited by the drive speeds. This of course is some crazy setup (which noone needs) but it should work ![]() This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |