Limewire Users help needed

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almost makes me wish i got the 16gb Touch because i can put every damn new album i want on here....Just threw on T-Pains Thr33 Ringz on it....Gonna take a stab at these movies now.
 

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I downloaded the Vuzu program. Downloaded a movie and some songs but when i try an open them they wont open for me. Any Idea at this stage what I'm doing wrong?
 
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I downloaded the Vuzu program. Downloaded a movie and some songs but when i try an open them they wont open for me. Any Idea at this stage what I'm doing wrong?

i think if you are trying to play them, you need some sort of player, like ITunes or something along those lines.

Bigamer cant thank you enough! This is great
 

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i think if you are trying to play them, you need some sort of player, like ITunes or something along those lines.

Bigamer cant thank you enough! This is great

So Windows media player is not enough? What about for just viewing jpg's?
 

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So Windows media player is not enough? What about for just viewing jpg's?

First of all download VLC for media playback.
Its is better than Windows Media by one hundred times.

You can get it from download.com, search for "vlc"

As for your question, you cant view the files (movies or music) from azureus vuse, you need to go to the folder where they were saved and view them there.

Find where that default folder by the Vuse options or by searching for the movie in your computers search
 
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Big gamer, i am having trouble putting the tv show onto my Ipod touch. i click on add new folder in Itunes and click azerius but there is only the albums, not the tv show. any help here?
 

Oh boy!
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No problem :103631605

For what its worth, Mininova is much better than the Vuze search and i preferred azureus without Vuse (much faster and less flashy shit, who needs that, you can get the old azureus version 2.5 by searching google)

azureus saves it to a folder (you can change where you want to save the files to)

You dont delete it from azureus if you want it, you REMOVE it from azureus and it will no longer be seeded for others from your computer.

Yeah its the same for movies and TV shows and its as easy as shitting.

Isnt this simple?
Cant believe more people arent aware of how easy this is, my friends are like "download me the batman movie dude", they think it takes a genius to get a movie downloaded

Can you preview a movie while downloading it? If you download porn oftentimes the same movie is under a different name. Or if I download porn I like to view the actresses before waiting a few hours until it's downloaded.
 

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Big gamer, i am having trouble putting the tv show onto my Ipod touch. i click on add new folder in Itunes and click azerius but there is only the albums, not the tv show. any help here?

:nohead:
You are like Kindergarten level when it comes to this stuff.

You cant put the downloaded videos or TV shows directly on the Ipod as the IPOD can only recognize MP4 formats on the software.

All movies are AVI format unless they say they are Ipod format.

In order to get them into MP4 you have to download a converter.

Try googling Videora, which is a free converter that works real nice
 

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Can you preview a movie while downloading it? If you download porn oftentimes the same movie is under a different name. Or if I download porn I like to view the actresses before waiting a few hours until it's downloaded.

No previews on Azureus, only Limewire.

PS who needs to download porn when Redtube works perfectly?
 
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:nohead:
You are like Kindergarten level when it comes to this stuff.

You cant put the downloaded videos or TV shows directly on the Ipod as the IPOD can only recognize MP4 formats on the software.

All movies are AVI format unless they say they are Ipod format.

In order to get them into MP4 you have to download a converter.

Try googling Videora, which is a free converter that works real nice

the funny thing is im real good with all other technology, it just happens i suck at this ipod stuff and this software in this regards

anyhow i will download that videora tomorrow, and im sure i will chime in with a few questions. thanks for all your help
 
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Biggamer, some times i download a song but when i go to add it in Itunes the song is not in the azerius folder. do you know where to find it then?
 

We didn't lose the game; we just ran out of time
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It should be there and only there unless you moved it.

Try searching the title of the song on your computer, it will come up rather quickly
 
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I didnt move it. the location is saying that its in this azerius folder, but its' not there. maybe its not a .mp3 file?

i am able to see it in Itunes under add file to library, however the song doesnt have a folder next to it like the other songs, it has a music symbol
 

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122966038836021137.html

After years of suing thousands of people for allegedly stealing music via the Internet, the recording industry is set to drop its legal assault as it searches for more effective ways to combat online music piracy.

The decision represents an abrupt shift of strategy for the industry, which has opened legal proceedings against about 35,000 people since 2003. Critics say the legal offensive ultimately did little to stem the tide of illegally downloaded music. And it created a public-relations disaster for the industry, whose lawsuits targeted, among others, several single mothers, a dead person and a 13-year-old girl.

Instead, the Recording Industry Association of America said it plans to try an approach that relies on the cooperation of Internet-service providers. The trade group said it has hashed out preliminary agreements with major ISPs under which it will send an email to the provider when it finds a provider's customers making music available online for others to take.

Depending on the agreement, the ISP will either forward the note to customers, or alert customers that they appear to be uploading music illegally, and ask them to stop. If the customers continue the file-sharing, they will get one or two more emails, perhaps accompanied by slower service from the provider. Finally, the ISP may cut off their access altogether.

The RIAA said it has agreements in principle with some ISPs, but declined to say which ones. But ISPs, which are increasingly cutting content deals of their own with entertainment companies, may have more incentive to work with the music labels now than in previous years.

The new approach dispenses with one of the most contentious parts of the lawsuit strategy, which involved filing lawsuits requiring ISPs to disclose the identities of file sharers. Under the new strategy, the RIAA would forward its emails to the ISPs without demanding to know the customers' identity.

Though the industry group is reserving the right to sue people who are particularly heavy file sharers, or who ignore repeated warnings, it expects its lawsuits to decline to a trickle. The group stopped filing mass lawsuits early this fall.

It isn't clear that the new strategy will work or how effective the collaboration with the ISPs will be. "There isn't any silver-bullet anti-piracy solution," said Eric Garland, president of BigChampagne LLC, a piracy consulting company.

Mr. Garland said he likes the idea of a solution that works more with consumers. In the years since the RIAA began its mass legal action, "It has become abundantly clear that the carrot is far more important than the stick." Indeed, many in the music industry felt the lawsuits had outlived their usefulness.

"I'd give them credit for stopping what they've already been doing because it's been so destructive," said Brian Toder, who represents a Minnesota mother involved in a high-profile file-sharing case. But his client isn't off the hook. The RIAA said it plans to continue with outstanding lawsuits.

Over the summer, New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo began brokering an agreement between the recording industry and the ISPs that would address both sides' piracy concerns. "We wanted to end the litigation," said Steven Cohen, Mr. Cuomo's chief of staff. "It's not helpful."

As the RIAA worked to cut deals with individual ISPs, Mr. Cuomo's office started working on a broader plan under which major ISPs would agree to work to prevent illegal file-sharing.

The RIAA believes the new strategy will reach more people, which itself is a deterrent. "Part of the issue with infringement is for people to be aware that their actions are not anonymous," said Mitch Bainwol, the group's chairman.

Mr. Bainwol said that while he thought the litigation had been effective in some regards, new methods were now available to the industry. "Over the course of five years, the marketplace has changed," he said in an interview. Litigation, he said, was successful in raising the public's awareness that file-sharing is illegal, but now he wants to try a strategy he thinks could prove more successful.

The RIAA says piracy would have been even worse without the lawsuits. Citing data from consulting firm NPD Group Inc., the industry says the percentage of Internet users who download music over the Internet has remained fairly constant, hovering around 19% over the past few years. However, the volume of music files shared over the Internet has grown steadily.

Meanwhile, music sales continue to fall. In 2003, the industry sold 656 million albums. In 2007, the number fell to 500 million CDs and digital albums, plus 844 million paid individual song downloads -- hardly enough to make up the decline in album sales.
 
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Buster that is some rediculous stuff there. they should worry about murder and drugs rather than music being illegally downloaded. ill keep stealing it
 

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