What Is A Torrent and How Does It Work
by: youcanworkthenet
status: Old Pro
Total views: 3
Word Count: 435
BitTorrent is different from other forms of P2P file sharing. With normal systems such as the Gnutella system, you will typically download a complete file from one source. In some cases the software allows you to download the one file from a number of contributing sources, thus speeding up the process. With BitTorrent, on the other hand, you download different bits of the file from a number of different sources (each file is split into about 1,000 pieces). This not only speeds up the transfer of large files around the network, but also allows you to upload a file at the same time as you are downloading it.
Some guy names Brian Dessent likened it to a book like so: A group of people around a table each have different pages of a book. They want to get the whole book, they let each other know what pages they have and what they require. Eventually the pages are passed around till a whole copy is obtained. If there are any pages missing, someone is available with the whole book (called a 'seed') who can supply what is missing to complete the book
Bram Cohen is the brainchild behind BitTorrent, which is therefore different to any other kind of P2P network. It works differently to other systems in its search facility: it has none! Users must first carry out a web search to find the file they require. There are, however, several BitTorrent search engines on the web such as Nabtor and TorrentSpy.
In addition to simultaneous downloading from multiples sources which is common with most of the modern P2P applications, eDonkey2000 also allows sharing of file segments where the file size is larger than 9.8M. As with BitTorrent, this allows you to upload a file while you are still downloading it so that the more popular files can be very rapidly distributed round the network. The problem with this is that sometimes the whole file cannot be found, and you are left with part of the file which you must complete at later date. This cannot happen with traditional P2P systems such as Gnutella (e.g. Limewire and Bearshare).
BlueWaterArticles.com: - What Is A Torrent and How Does It Work
About the Author
To learn more about torrents and speeding them up, please visit Micro Torrent Download
*You may use the contents of the above article on any site so long as you adhere to our Terms Of Service and include a link back to our site as follows
Rating: Not yet rated
