If you find entries for the Azureus incoming port you are using , you need to disable IP spoofing detection. You may need to disable the firewall function entirely. Check what the remaining 0.
Open up the torrent's Details and go to the Files tab to see which file is incomplete. If it is Thumbs. Operating systems sometimes generate these files when you browse a directory or folder. Such hidden system files on your computer are protected and cannot be replaced with the version from the download, so Azureus will keep trying to re-download it.
If the file is a text or readme file, you may ignore it if it is not essential. If all else fails, stop and restart the torrent again. Navigate to the new location and just click Select Folder. You may have to wait a little bit if a large amount of data has to be transferred over to the new location.
Step 3 : Now that the files have been moved, you need to start up the download again. Simply right-click on the torrent again and choose Start. The download will continue from whatever percentage it had already completed and download the rest. This can save a significant amount of bandwidth compared to starting over again, especially for very large torrents.
The process is exactly the same for Mac users running OS X. Jennifer I would like to say thank you, Oron. You're comment about downloads being too fast for the computer got me thinking. I was having the same problem, but only when I was using a torrent client. I went in and put a limit on the download speed and have not had any problems since.
Once again, thank you. Paul I am having the same problem. Windows 7 SP1 on a desktop. Download of any file freezes part way through or never starts. Bizarre as I can send and receive large emails so not a network problem - just a problem for downloads.
Have also tried various browsers without any change. Any suggestions smayonak I'm not entirely sure where the cause of this problem originates but it must be in a system component common to all internet use.
More than likely a cache-like component that Windows uses when it accesses the internet. I believe that the TEMP directory and the internet cache are used to interact with downloaded content and might cause the issue. Some browsers appear to use a cache outside of the IE cache, whereas others place everything in the IE cache. In theory, a corrupted download may somehow interfere with new download attempts of the same file.
However, this is not something I'm an expert on - and it's only a theory at this point. This is a hail Mary: Try using CCleaner to clean the system's temp and cache files. Then reattempt the download. Only attempt its use judiciously. It could be a virus. Franklin what about when it stop thinking the download is complete but ist im trying to download pokemon and have tried 42 times but keeps stoping.
I noticed on all the downloads that would fail that the download speed would ramp up to kB a second and then just taper off to zero and remain hung up until cancelling. With three different test files that would not previously download after trying them different days and times over a 3 week period I was finally able to download every single one. Probably be fixed with some patch to Windows sooner or later.
The computer was actually to fast for a change Dan Thanks for the suggestion! I am sure there are other programs out there that can do the same for free. David I don't think the network is at blame, at least not for me. Posted May 4, I've been having the same problems since I installed Roxio. I signed up to this forum to find out why. Thanks for the answers to my problem Roxio contains media indexer, so disable the Roxio module culprit of that issue or remove Roxio.
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