To mark a decade of New Doctor Who, BBC Worldwide is bringing an exclusive ten-episode box set to BitTorrent Bundle. Watch Peter Capaldi break down the best of Doctor Who. Then, download or stream the Decade of the Doctor collection, with special video features, for $12. Apr 4, 2015 - Doctor Who fans can now download episodes from BitTorrent without feeling guilty! The BBC and the peer-to-peer sharing platform have.
Thanks, bog23man and scjdg. Also, thanks for the offer, schroed4.
Yes, I changed the naming scheme around a bit from the original sources. I figured that a uniform naming scheme would lead to fewer potential problems, and I chose this particular one (starting the file names with 'SxxxEyyPzz - Name Of Serial') because it would be possible to take all of the video files, dump them in one directory, select them all and play them in order without having to re-order them in your video player of choice.
As for the state of the torrent: It's very healthy for being so new. I have 60 peers connected, and I've been uploading at a very consistent average of 625kB/s.
I have very strong evidence that says that I'm not the only seeder any more; someone was running a seedbox that was outpacing every other peer in terms of percentage downloaded... Today, I'm not seeing that host in my client list any more, and it should have downloaded the complete torrent by now if it continued at the same speed since the last couple of times I've seen it. (The Pirate Bay's statistics say there are 2 seeders, but I know those stats aren't actually reliable, as I saw it go up to 4 seeders before I'd even uploaded 25% of this.)
In terms of raw bits and reliability, I've uploaded 312GB out of the 201GB... I've been down a total of 5 times, each time less than 3 minutes.
The average completion of the people I'm connected to is 30%, with a core group of 6 people leading the pack at 82.3%. For those who haven't hit their ISP's download cap yet, things should start speeding up soon, as the number of rare pieces continues to drop.
Yes, I changed the naming scheme around a bit from the original sources. I figured that a uniform naming scheme would lead to fewer potential problems, and I chose this particular one (starting the file names with 'SxxxEyyPzz - Name Of Serial') because it would be possible to take all of the video files, dump them in one directory, select them all and play them in order without having to re-order them in your video player of choice.
As for the state of the torrent: It's very healthy for being so new. I have 60 peers connected, and I've been uploading at a very consistent average of 625kB/s.
I have very strong evidence that says that I'm not the only seeder any more; someone was running a seedbox that was outpacing every other peer in terms of percentage downloaded... Today, I'm not seeing that host in my client list any more, and it should have downloaded the complete torrent by now if it continued at the same speed since the last couple of times I've seen it. (The Pirate Bay's statistics say there are 2 seeders, but I know those stats aren't actually reliable, as I saw it go up to 4 seeders before I'd even uploaded 25% of this.)
In terms of raw bits and reliability, I've uploaded 312GB out of the 201GB... I've been down a total of 5 times, each time less than 3 minutes.
The average completion of the people I'm connected to is 30%, with a core group of 6 people leading the pack at 82.3%. For those who haven't hit their ISP's download cap yet, things should start speeding up soon, as the number of rare pieces continues to drop.
Doctor Who Torrent Complete
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