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Posted by Snorkum on 01/02/07 21:13
Dude, Limewire still can bring home the bacon ;)
Mayor Snorkum.
On Sun, 31 Dec 2006 15:17:08 GMT, "Doug" <DZappyNOSPAM@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>Alright, thanks man, I"ll have a look into some of those, and I do
>appreciate your time! A lot changes in the digital age in a relatively
>short span of time, that's for sure!
>
>Doug
>
>
>"Technobarbarian" <Technobarbarian-ztopzpam@gmail.com> wrote in message
>news:4596c539$0$17951$c3e8da3@news.astraweb.com...
>>
>> "Doug" <DZappyNOSPAM@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:J9ylh.2314$Pr4.2189@trndny06...
>>> It's been a couple years since I've messed with file sharing, such as
>>> Napster and Kazaa ++, what's the big one that everyone's using today?? I
>>> tried loading my Kazaa up and don't get much anymore. FREE would be nice
>>> with no adware.
>>
>> Shareaza, eMule and uTorrent, all free and no adware, but much of the
>> action for MP3s has moved elsewhere. Between RIAA lawsuits, poor quality
>> files and the deliberate injection of bad files into the stream, P2P has
>> become a less than optimal solution. If you're willing to pay a few bucks
>> for a premium news server binary usenet groups have become a good choice.
>> If the "free" usenet service that comes with your internet account offers
>> binary groups and good retention you don't need the premium server. There
>> are a number of good programs built for harvesting binary files, News Bin
>> Pro is one of the best. Grabit is a good freeware option. The latest
>> wrinkle is a combination of one of the music rental services, like
>> Rhapsody, and a good conversion program like SoundTaxi. All you can eat
>> for $15 a month for as long as you want to scour through 3 million songs,
>> and the first two weeks are free. The beat marches on, next week something
>> else might be hot.
>>
>> TB
>>
>
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