Blog Archives

ItsHidden Offers Free and Anonymous Torrenting [BitTorrent]

If you’re of the mindset that what you do with your BitTorrent client is your business and not that of people snooping, sniffing, and prying at your packets along the way, ItsHidden offers a free VPN server to anonymize your activity.

Photo by Paulpod.

ItsHidden uses 128-bit encryption on the secure tunnel created between you and the ItsHidden servers. Based out of the Netherlands, ItsHidden takes advantage of the legal climate there and doesn’t log any activity passed through its servers.

To access the ItsHidden VPN, you need to sign up for a free account and make a small configuration tweak to your respective operating system to enable the VPN. They include step by step instructions for Windows XP, users of other systems will either have to use them as a template or look up the specific steps for their OS. ItsHidden requires no software installation.

During our test run with a large Linux distribution, connection speeds with the ItsHidden VPN enabled were only negligibly decreased from our standard torrent speeds without the VPN in place. Check out the link below for more information and if you know of another service for anonymizing your internet activity—torrent-related or otherwise—let's hear about it in the comments.





uTorrent 2.0 Beta Brings Fixes and Improvements, Adds UDP Support [Downloads]

Windows only: uTorrent, the most popular BitTorrent client on the planet, has released a new 2.0 beta complete with bug fixes and new features, including UDP tracker support.

UD-wha? As all-things-BitTorrent weblog TorrentFreak explains, UDP trackers are much less resource intensive than HTTP trackers, and most torrent sites out there support UDP—meaning that if uTorrent, the most popular torrent client, were to support it, that's great news for all the torrent trackers out there. On the surface that might not seem like the most exciting news, but it will likely mean browsing your favorite torrent site in a browser could be significantly speedier now that your BitTorrent client isn't slowing down the tracker with all those HTTP requests. Hit up the uTorrent forum for a list of all the changes and fixes in the beta if you’re ready to try it out.

uTorrent 2.0 Beta is freeware, Windows only.

uTorrent 2.0 Beta [uTorrent Forum via TorrentFreak]





ezRSS Provides BitTorrent Feeds of Your Favorite TV Shows [BitTorrent]

Web site ezRSS is yet another web site designed to help you “subscribe” to your favorite TV shows via BitTorrent so your download automatically starts as soon as a new episode is available (known as broadcatching).

We’ve seen a couple of similar offerings in the past, including previously mentioned FeedMyTorrents (now dead) and tvRSS (which is also defunct and now actually redirects to ezRSS), but ezRSS comes from the folks at EZTV, probably the most popular TV torrent release group.

Need a little help setting up broadcatching with your BitTorrent client? Check out ezRSS’s guide to using the RSS feed with uTorrent, or follow our previous instructions on how to get your TV season pass (substitute ezRSS for tvRSS in that post and you should be good to go). In the meantime, let’s hear how you automate your downloads in the comments.





Opera Unite Puts a Media Server in Your Browser [Downloads]

Windows/Mac/Linux: A test version of Opera’s formidable alternative browser introduces Unite, a plug-in that lets users share music, pictures, files, notes, and chat rooms straight from their desktop. Check out its services and features in a quick screenshot tour.

Before jumping into the big pictures, note that Opera 10 with Unite is a “Labs” release, meaning some features may not work as intended and might run a bit buggy. I created Unite services in an Opera window and accessed them with a Firefox browser, and all but the straight-up web serving, oddly enough, worked just fine.

Once you’ve signed in, or signed up, with an Opera account, you can hand out your sharing URL (in the form of computername.username.operaunite.com and, when you start up your Opera Unite services, your friends will see the same landing page as you. Streaming music and full-res pictures from your system can obviously be a bandwidth and system resource drag, but if you’re using Opera Unite mostly while you’re away from your system, that’s probably not an issue.

Opera Unite is a free download for Windows, Mac, and Linux systems; using and serving up files and media requires a free Opera account sign-up. Click the screenshots below for a gallery-style tour of Unite’s features, and be sure to hit the “800×600″ links for full-size shots.


The controls for Opera Unite mostly run out of a pop-in sidebar, allowing you to start, stop, and configure services you want running. Oddly enough, to set a password for each service, you have to visit it from the browser instead of set it in your configuration panel. New services can be installed with a few clicks from Opera’s site, but it appears this Unite test version comes loaded with everything that’s out there, for the moment.

The Fridge is a pretty neat, simple, and ingenious little service. Anyone who knows your sharing name can stop by and write a little note to tack to your fridge, though you can tweak the accessibility from the configuration options.

The straight-up web server. Doesn’t support PHP, mySQL, or any of the other modern web services (though those may arrive in the future), but could be helpful for selective web access to your-eyes-only documents, or hosting docs from crashed/overwhelmed servers.

Photo sharing is straight-up and simple. The server points to whatever folder they want shared, and the user sees thumbnails and bigger pictures when clicked, and can download the full-res version from there.

Music streaming is also fairly straightforward, but offers preview streams along with full downloads. If you’ve got a whole lot of music you want to offload to friends, you’d be better off running the more direct File Sharing service (not pictured, but pretty much how you’d imagine it).

The chat service works well and is really snappy in relay time, at least in our own browser-to-browser tests. Then again, there are a whole bunch of web-based services that let you create instant chat rooms (TinyChat and Chat.io come to mind) without having to make your browser the center of repetitive pings.





WatchDox Adds Security Options to Online Document Sharing [File Sharing]

We’ve highlighted many ways to help you share files over the internet. Newly launched service WatchDox aims to make the document-sharing process more secure.

Once you've chosen and uploaded the document(s) you want to share, WatchDox lets you enter your recipient's email address along with your own, which WatchBox will validate. Then you can select what permissions you want to give to the person you're sharing with—including whether they can print, forward, or copy the document. You can also set when you want the document to expire (maximum 30 days).

As its name implies, WatchDox lets you track who views and opens your documents and modify the permission settings as you like. You can send an unlimited number of documents (uploaded two at a time, up to 15MB), and store up to 50MB online. There’s also a Microsoft Outlook plug-in available for download to share directly from Outlook.

Of course, WatchDox can't guarantee 100-percent safe document transfers—it can't prevent someone from taking a screen grab, for one—but the service provides enough added security benefits to make it worth a look. WatchDox is currently in beta and free to use.





ShowRSS Automates Your TV Show Downloads [BitTorrent]

If you’re missing the now defunct FeedMyTorrents and its awesome duplicate-free RSS based automation, showRSS offers the same functionality and integration with RSS-enabled BitTorrent clients.

Founded by a refugee from FeedMyTorrents, showRSS has shielded itself from the same fate by setting up camp in Spain where torrents have been ruled legal. The site collects torrents from a variety of sources and weeds out the duplicates. You pick from shows you want to keep an eye on and showRSS adds them to your personal RSS feed. From there you can load the feed into a feed reader and manually select links to shows as they appear or you can plug it into a BitTorrent client with RSS support like µTorrent to automate the process.





Discover Shares Files from iPhones to Computers for Free [Downloads]

Free iPhone app Discover isn’t as polished a solution to hosting, sharing, and transfering files to and from your iPhone as previously reviewed Air Sharing, but for casual use, it’s hard to beat the $0 price.

As most new iPhone/touch owners find out, usually in a disappointing revelation, their devices are the only Apple portables that don’t offer a “disk mode” for easy, thumb-drive-like file carrying and transfer. Apps like Discover (and Air Sharing) create a temporary webDAV network share, allowing Windows, Mac, or Linux systems to connect by adding the iPhone’s IP address as a network drive or, in the case of Discover, using a browser to access the app’s web-based interface.

Check out how Discover works with your files in the screenshots below (click for larger images):

 You can turn it off, or re-activate it from the upper-left green button, but this pop-up screen gives you what you need to know—the IP address, and port, you should point your browser or file browser to.  Click on your "Private" or "Public" folders (or another that you've created), and you'll see your files and their relevant filetype icons. The advertising strip across the top comes down when you buy the full version.  PDFs, MP3s, Word documents, spreadsheets, and simple text files can be read or previewed in Discover's file view.
 Options to turn on file or folder password protection.  Point your browser to Discover's address, and you'll get a JavaScript-enhanced view of your files, plus buttons to upload and download your items in batches. As with Air Sharing, big files or clusters of files can sometimes spur lag or stalling.  The "basic" view, for those who roll that way.
 One nice feature of Discovery is a prompt showing you when it's transferring files, and how complete the process is.

Not pictured are support for Apple MobileMe syncing/transfer and a connection to an OS X-based server.

Discovery is a free download for iPhones and iPod touch models running the 2.0 or later software; the paid ($5) version takes away advertisements.

Discover [iTunes Store (direct link) via PC World]





SkipScreen Lets You Pass Go and Collect Your Download [Firefox]

Firefox: Thanks to an explosion in their popularity, it’s hard to avoid the ad-filled countdown screens of file services like Rapidshare and Megaupload these days. Skip the wait with this handy extension.

SkipScreen is a no-frills Firefox extension with a singular focus. Once you install SkipScreen the splash screens on popular file sharing services, that show you advertisements and encourage you to upgrade to premium service to avoid having to wait, are a thing of the past. As you can see in the screenshot above, the save file dialogue box popped up immediately while the count down was still in progress. Check out the video below to see it in action:

SkipScreen works on the following services: zShare, Mediafire, Sendspace, Sharebee, Rapidshare, Megaupload, DepositFiles, Divshare, Linkbucks, and Link-protector, with more on the way. If you have your own tips, tricks, or work arounds for getting the most from free file sharing services, sound off in the comments below. SkipScreen is free and works wherever Firefox does.





Start BitTorrent Downloads at Home from Any Computer with Dropbox [BitTorrent]

Blogger Guillermo Esteves loves his BitTorrent, so when he’s away from his home computer, he still wants to start up any download at a moment’s notice. His solution: Use file-syncing application Dropbox to sync torrents between computers.

Assuming you’ve got Dropbox installed on your home computer and work computer, for example, you can download a torrent, save it to your Dropbox folder, and let Dropbox sync that new torrent to your home computer.

Using the folder monitoring feature available in most popular BitTorrent applications (including uTorrent for Windows/Mac and Transmission for Mac/Linux), your BitTorrent app of choice can monitor your Dropbox folder for new torrent files and automatically open them when they appear. In practice, that translates to dead simple, instant remote BitTorrent downloads, which we like very much.

You can also upload torrent files to Dropbox from the Dropbox web interface, so you could even do this from a computer where you can’t install Dropbox. This isn’t the only remote BitTorrent method out there, but it’s certainly a good (and easy to implement) one.





Vertor Verifies, Previews Torrents Before You Download Them [BitTorrent]

Ever spend hours downloading content off BitTorrent to find that what you downloaded wasn't close to what you wanted, or—worse yet—it contained a virus? Wouldn't it be nice if your BitTorrent tracker verified every torrent?

BitTorrent tracker Vertor verifies, scans, and previews BitTorrent downloads so you don’t end up with viruses or bum downloads. It does so by downloading every torrent it finds and scanning the files for viruses. If the download is a video, Vertor takes extracts stills from the video and posts them on the site so you can get a better idea of the content and quality of the download in question.

According to the Vertor stats, the tracker has processed 418,000 torrents in change. Of those 418k, 133,000 are verified, 2,930 were infected, 5,585 were password protected, and 257,000 contained some sort of download errors. Of course, you'll never see the bum torrents on Vertor, which is the whole point. The site is brand new, and though it appears to be working through some growing pains—they're updating their antivirus software for more accuracy, for example—it's a great idea. Previously mentioned Seedpeer took a similar approach to eliminating bad torrents, but Vertor’s larger feature set looks promising.






WP Like Button Plugin by Free WordPress Templates