I’m migrating because Transmission is horrible for a large amount of torrents (multiple of hundreds) due to the complete lack of concurrency capability. But I’ll miss Transmission. This configuration has spanned many different operating systems and was migrated from transmission-gtk to transmission-daemon.

Translation of all the numbers:

Downloaded bytes: 64.4TB, 58.6 TiB

files added: 26.8 million.

seconds active: 3.84 years

session count: 802 times started

uploaded bytes: 909 TB, 827 TiB

  • @RinseDrizzle@midwest.social
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    93 months ago

    I gotta get my ship sea worthy again.

    Thiiiiink it goes something like this:

    1. Catch a VPN - heard good about Mulvad but no port forwarding? Any other recs?
    2. Set that up - maybe need more info here 😅
    3. Use torrent client/website?? - what are the cool kids doing these days, qbittorrent?

    Feel free to shoot DMs too 🤙 I just love sailing advice.

    • Pete
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      33 months ago

      I can answer 1 and 3 easily. AirVPN is decent and Qbit seems to be the consensus.

    • @Dreamless4561@sh.itjust.works
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      23 months ago

      Mullvad, Proton and Surfshark are good. Proton has port forwarding if you need it.

      Look up how to bind a VPN to your torrent client and you’ll be good.

      qBittorrent is the best by far

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      13 months ago

      Qbittorrent, plex or jellyfin and if you’re into it, the arr suite for automation, all configured in a single docker compose file. It’s beautiful. But I don’t know if it’s as nice under Windows (if that’s what you’re using). For Linux it’s definitely super nice

      • @abbadon420@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        If you’re dockerizing it, you’re dockerizing it under Linux. Nobody dockerizes anything under Windows, that’s the definition of insanity. And the tool itself works basically the same whether you’re using Windows or Linux.