
i guess if you're a distributer / seeder? then these things come into play.
if you're more parasitically inclined, however... :icon30:
Hahaha are you serious^misantropia^ wrote:But don't worry your pretty head about it.
Nothing much, if you only download the occasional torrent. But it accesses the hard drive more frequently than Azureus (where this is adjustable) and thus causes more wear. Azureus can be configured to store newly downloaded material in it's cache for longer before writing it .bitWISE wrote:Whats wrong with the official client?
Yep.[xeno]Julios wrote:but don't u need the java vm to run azureus?^misantropia^ wrote: The bulk of that memory is taken up by the Java VM, not the Azureus executable proper.
doesn't that make clients like utorrent effectively less memory intensive, since you don't need the java vm for them?
50mb or so isn't really that much of a problem any more, a few years ago maybe but I'm guessing most people who would run a torrent client will also be those who know something about computers and have a decent amount of ram.[xeno]Julios wrote:right - i'm just wondering why anyone would use azureus, given that unfortunate constraint.
if it were a graphics editing program or web surfing progy or something, i'd see the relevance.MKJ wrote:
i like its ui.
not just a matter of 10kMKJ wrote: i hardly use torrents anyways so i dont care about the OMG BLOAT 10k extra ram usage
[xeno]Julios wrote:btw the utorrent program itself weighs 173kb (stand alone exe).
it takes up 4 megs of memory when running (without any torrents loaded - not sure how much with torrents)
conserving ram is still a good habit.PhoeniX wrote:
50mb or so isn't really that much of a problem any more, a few years ago maybe but I'm guessing most people who would run a torrent client will also be those who know something about computers and have a decent amount of ram.
Saying that, I still prefer uTorrent.