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-   -   Limewire 5.6.2(pirate edition) and java 1.7 (https://www.gnutellaforums.com/connection-problems/98945-limewire-5-6-2-pirate-edition-java-1-7-a.html)

robinepowell January 17th, 2013 06:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lord of the Rings (Post 371241)
For FrostWire, either 4.20.9 or 4.21.8. I preferred 4.20.9 and it connected faster for me.
For Phex, there's only one version for Windows available.

I downloaded 4.20.9 version but it only has one green bar for the start up connection.

Also what info is there on Frostwire 5? I keep getting pop ups to upgrade to it.

Lord of the Rings January 17th, 2013 10:00 PM

Not good. Your failure to connect with either LW or FrostWire suggests something might be blocking these programs.

Did you try a fresh connection file for Frostwire? https://hotfile.com/list/2076270/ac95d09 Choose the Windows version. If this does not fix the connection problem then there must be some other reason.

Either your firewall, other security software or your router's NAT is blocking gnutella network connections. Else it is your ISP.

If the above connection fix does not fix FrostWire connecting, then I think it's time we had a look at your setup, http://www.gnutellaforums.com/connec...-you-post.html :)

FrostWire 5 is a torrent only program, it does not connect to the gnutella network.

robinepowell January 18th, 2013 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lord of the Rings (Post 371383)
Not good. Your failure to connect with either LW or FrostWire suggests something might be blocking these programs.

Did you try a fresh connection file for Frostwire? https://hotfile.com/list/2076270/ac95d09 Choose the Windows version. If this does not fix the connection problem then there must be some other reason.

Either your firewall, other security software or your router's NAT is blocking gnutella network connections. Else it is your ISP.

If the above connection fix does not fix FrostWire connecting, then I think it's time we had a look at your setup, http://www.gnutellaforums.com/connec...-you-post.html :)

FrostWire 5 is a torrent only program, it does not connect to the gnutella network.

Regular or high speed download?

Lord of the Rings January 18th, 2013 03:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by robinepowell (Post 371399)
Regular or high speed download?

I do not understand your question. :confused:

On p2p file-sharing networks, you can only download as fast as people sharing can give you and as many of them as you can connect to. However, there are some scam softwares that limit downloads to prompt you to buy their pro or commercial versions of the software. If you ever see that, ignore them, there will be an equivalent or usually far superior programs out there that is totally free and does not limit your speeds.

For example, Acquisition, a MacOSX shareware program would limit your download speeds after an hour. pfft ... first gnutella program I ever heard of that was designed to do that. The program developer is very commercially greedy, selfish and dishonest. And so are those that work for any program that attempts to limit your speeds in the hope you will buy their pro software.

robinepowell January 19th, 2013 08:58 PM

Extraction 2 Filmyzilla Verified 【LEGIT】

Extraction 2, as a piece of contemporary action filmmaking, both benefits from and is endangered by the torrent culture exemplified by “Filmyzilla (verified).” The film’s formal strengths—its embodied staging of violence, emphasis on empathy, and technical virtuosity—remain worth defending; the distribution model around it is a pragmatic puzzle demanding new ethics, markets, and shared compromises.

This normalization has ripple effects. Creators face eroded box-office returns and streaming revenue; studios respond with gated releases, geo-locks, and heavier DRM—measures that can further alienate legitimate customers. Meanwhile, piracy communities cultivate a culture of curation and commentary, where files are shared alongside subtitles, edits, and discussions. Thus, piracy functions both as a symptom of unequal distribution and a parallel cultural infrastructure with its own norms. A balanced view resists caricature. Condemning piracy outright ignores structural problems in global media access; celebrating it without restraint ignores creators’ labor. Extraction 2’s appeal—its spectacle and star power—makes it particularly susceptible to widespread unauthorized distribution. The film’s existence within both theatrical and pirated circuits raises questions about responsibility: What does it mean to be a film consumer in an age where immediacy is expected, but supply is still controlled? How do socioeconomic realities shape the choices people make about access? Cultural consequences: taste, value, and attention Extraction 2 belongs to a broader trend where blockbuster action is engineered for shareable moments—set pieces that circulate as viral clips. The economics of attention reward scenes that can be excerpted, memed, and redistributed. Piracy accelerates that circulation, decoupling the scene from the whole and reshaping how audiences value films: not as holistic narratives to be experienced once in a theater, but as modular excitements to be sampled repeatedly. The long-term cultural effect may be a fragmentation of cinematic appreciation—less focus on story arcs and more on isolated thrills. A final thought: remediation and futures Rather than a simple moral binary, the intersection of Extraction 2 and “Filmyzilla (verified)” invites creative remediation. Studios and distributors can learn from the piracy ecosystem’s speed and accessibility—experimenting with simultaneous global windows, lower-cost digital rentals, or regionally sensitive pricing. Filmmakers can craft work that rewards full, communal viewing even as clips spread. Audiences, finally, play a role: their habits—how they access, pay for, and discuss films—help shape the incentives that determine what kind of cinema gets made. extraction 2 filmyzilla verified

Extraction 2, the 2023 action film starring Chris Hemsworth, operates on two overlapping fronts: an adrenaline-fueled revenge thriller and a meditation on modern commodification of violence. When that film’s title is paired with “Filmyzilla (verified)”—a phrase signaling piracy sites and the culture around them—the juxtaposition opens an essay that explores cinematic authorship, audience demand, and the moral economy of digital distribution. Immediate impressions: spectacle as currency Extraction 2 trades in immediacy. Its plot is lean—missions, rescues, and escalating set pieces—constructed primarily to sustain kinetic momentum. Where early-2000s action relied on extended exposition or character arcs, Extraction 2 often treats narrative as connective tissue between stunts. The film’s aesthetic choices—handheld camera work, long takes interrupted by sudden cuts, and intimately framed close-ups—flatten the distance between viewer and violence. This produces an effect: spectacle becomes the primary currency of engagement. The viewer is invited to experience danger as presence, not consequence. Character and empathy under pressure Yet beneath the bruising choreography lies a quieter strategy. The protagonist is no mythic superhero but a damaged operative whose competence is inseparable from vulnerability. Small human details (a failing friendship, a moral hesitation, glimpses of paternal care) function as anchor points. These moments let the audience cross from mere voyeurism into empathy; they humanize the machine of action. In doing so, Extraction 2 asks whether visceral spectacle requires a moral hinge: can we root for someone while recognizing the destructive pathways they travel? Editing, choreography, and the grammar of action Technically, the film is a study in modern action grammar. Long tracking shots that move through chaotic set pieces, alternating with rapid intercutting for impact, create a rhythm that simulates breath. Fight choreography emphasizes improvised resourcefulness—urban geometry becomes a weapon. Sound design plays an unsung role: the mix of muffled thuds, sudden silences, and a low-frequency rumble renders violence tactile. These formal elements collaborate to make danger legible, not just seen but felt. The piracy angle: “Filmyzilla (verified)” as social text Invoking “Filmyzilla (verified)” shifts the essay’s terrain from aesthetics to distribution ethics and audience behavior. Filmyzilla and similar torrent/downloading sites occupy a paradoxical position: they democratize access while undermining the commercial ecosystems that fund filmmaking. For many viewers—especially in regions with limited theatrical release windows, high ticket prices, or delayed streaming availability—such sites provide immediacy and inclusion. The “verified” tag is performative: it promises authenticity in an informal economy, normalizing piracy through trust signals that mimic legitimate platforms. Extraction 2, as a piece of contemporary action


Lord of the Rings January 19th, 2013 09:23 PM

Regular. :) It's only a small file so you do not need any high speed to download it.

robinepowell January 19th, 2013 09:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lord of the Rings (Post 371435)
Regular. :) It's only a small file so you do not need any high speed to download it.

Thanks! I'll try to get download it soon and let you know. :)

robinepowell January 19th, 2013 10:00 PM

I think I downloaded the fix, but I can't tell since Frostwire still doesn't work. One green bar and it still says "starting connection".

This is frustrating, because I have a bunch of songs I want to download and burn to CD and redo another since the first four songs are no good since my mother had the CD in her car's CD player.

Lord of the Rings January 19th, 2013 10:04 PM

Can you post your system details so perhaps we might be able to find where the problem lay? :)

robinepowell January 20th, 2013 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lord of the Rings (Post 371441)
Can you post your system details so perhaps we might be able to find where the problem lay? :)

I have Windows 7 Home Edition and IE 9. I don't know what else you want. Oh I have Kapersky Anti-virus.


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