Realistically, could I help seed it from my phone?
I’ve not used torrent since playing with it a bit a couple of decades ago, so I’ve no idea where to start. But if it’s practical and works well the concept is very appealing.
I have a no log VPN and I’m running Firefox with ublock origin and privacy Badger. I’m also thinking of running Mullvad DNS on my router but currently use Open DNS.
I would do this from home where I have fttp, not asynchronous but it’s about 70 up. That could change though.
I do have a laptop but I try not to use Windows, Android is much better for me. Having my phone start torrent activity when I get home would be a fantastic resource for me while also giving back via seeding.
Any links or advice you can give would be very kind of you, and I’d like to repost if there’s better places for this kind of enquiry.
I wouldn’t recommend a phone. It would kill your battery, and speeds would be terrible. Find an older computer or a beat up laptop and install qbittorrent on it. You might also need to forward the port.
To allow multiple simultaneous connections over the network, computers use these things called ports, which are numbers used to identify the connection. When the operating system sees that a network packet has arrived, it looks at the port and then forwards the packet to the right application.
Routers create a local network that is isolated from the outside, and all the traffic that goes to or comes from the internet, goes through the router.
If someone wants to connect to you, they have to go through the router. By default, routers will just refuse any connection coming from the outside. They do allow connections from the inside going out. Note that after the connection is established, communication can be bidirectional. Think of it like a social network where you need to be friends with someone to chat. Establishing a connection is like sending a friend request.
Port forwarding basically means telling your router “if someone tries to connect to you on port XXXX, forward those connections to port YYYY on computer ZZZZ”.
I guess for iOS, you have to sideload, bit there is a transmission app. You can sideload using altStore, jailbreak (I think there is a .deb, else you have to use a IPA installer) or using a service that has enterprise certificate in order to sign and install apps.
Realistically, could I help seed it from my phone?
I’ve not used torrent since playing with it a bit a couple of decades ago, so I’ve no idea where to start. But if it’s practical and works well the concept is very appealing.
I have a no log VPN and I’m running Firefox with ublock origin and privacy Badger. I’m also thinking of running Mullvad DNS on my router but currently use Open DNS.
I would do this from home where I have fttp, not asynchronous but it’s about 70 up. That could change though.
I do have a laptop but I try not to use Windows, Android is much better for me. Having my phone start torrent activity when I get home would be a fantastic resource for me while also giving back via seeding.
Any links or advice you can give would be very kind of you, and I’d like to repost if there’s better places for this kind of enquiry.
I wouldn’t recommend a phone. It would kill your battery, and speeds would be terrible. Find an older computer or a beat up laptop and install qbittorrent on it. You might also need to forward the port.
To allow multiple simultaneous connections over the network, computers use these things called ports, which are numbers used to identify the connection. When the operating system sees that a network packet has arrived, it looks at the port and then forwards the packet to the right application.
Routers create a local network that is isolated from the outside, and all the traffic that goes to or comes from the internet, goes through the router.
If someone wants to connect to you, they have to go through the router. By default, routers will just refuse any connection coming from the outside. They do allow connections from the inside going out. Note that after the connection is established, communication can be bidirectional. Think of it like a social network where you need to be friends with someone to chat. Establishing a connection is like sending a friend request.
Port forwarding basically means telling your router “if someone tries to connect to you on port XXXX, forward those connections to port YYYY on computer ZZZZ”.
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This is fantastic, thank you so much!
I guess for iOS, you have to sideload, bit there is a transmission app. You can sideload using altStore, jailbreak (I think there is a .deb, else you have to use a IPA installer) or using a service that has enterprise certificate in order to sign and install apps.
The mega link is up.
https://mega.nz/file/9xskkYQI#USRixlFLzyUVjURDxgR-p6lVogAZiHP3RdczFAYY3p8