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View Full Version : New to Usenet...finding/requesting files?



Matthias777
04-21-2009, 01:24 AM
I just made the switch to Usenet from torrents today, and was wondering how to find/request certain files. For instance, I'm trying to find several episodes of The Office (episodes 5 & 7-11 of season 5), and can't seem to find them anywhere. How do I go about finding them or requesting that they be posted?

zot
04-21-2009, 01:48 AM
I think you might find them here: http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/f-tv-nzbs-120/

Matthias777
04-21-2009, 02:02 AM
I think you might find them here: http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/f-tv-nzbs-120/
I did try that first, and got


This NZB is no longer active (deleted from our servers).
Try searching for a newer posting of it used the search link at the top of this page.

SonsOfLiberty
04-21-2009, 05:05 AM
Well then go to Binsearch.info, or Newzleech or Bintube and search that file name, then check the files you want, crate nzb and then download.

zot
04-21-2009, 06:35 AM
Sorry, I didn't realize that FST's NZB retention is still only 100 days. :(

Matthias777
04-21-2009, 09:25 PM
Well then go to Binsearch.info, or Newzleech or Bintube and search that file name, then check the files you want, crate nzb and then download.

Thanks! What do I do if I'm still unable to find a file? For instance, I'm unable to find episode 5 of season 5 of The Office; it'll come up when using one of the search engines, but it's apparently no longer being hosted on the servers anywhere (Grabit tries for awhile and then says "Article not found").

SonsOfLiberty
04-21-2009, 09:41 PM
Well then go to Binsearch.info, or Newzleech or Bintube and search that file name, then check the files you want, crate nzb and then download.

Thanks! What do I do if I'm still unable to find a file? For instance, I'm unable to find episode 5 of season 5 of The Office; it'll come up when using one of the search engines, but it's apparently no longer being hosted on the servers anywhere (Grabit tries for awhile and then says "Article not found").


http://binsearch.info/?q=The+Office+S05E05+HDTV+XviD-XOR&max=25&adv_age=240&server=

Says 172 days old, and SS shows it's complete..so as long as you use Astraweb or Giganews, this NZB is complete.

http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/picture.php?albumid=225&pictureid=17643

Matthias777
04-21-2009, 09:55 PM
I suppose I must be doing something wrong, then. Here's what I get whenever I tried to download those files earlier (more than once).

http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/attachment.php?attachmentid=5912&d=1240350818

iLOVENZB
04-21-2009, 11:24 PM
Usually you have to request on IRC.

saulin
04-26-2009, 05:57 AM
I suppose I must be doing something wrong, then. Here's what I get whenever I tried to download those files earlier (more than once).

http://filesharingtalk.com/vb3/attachment.php?attachmentid=5912&d=1240350818


I think the problem is that the retention on your usenet server is not that great. If you had Astraweb or Giganews you should be ok or any service with about 200 days of retention anyways.

Matthias777
04-26-2009, 06:32 AM
I think the problem is that the retention on your usenet server is not that great. If you had Astraweb or Giganews you should be ok or any service with about 200 days of retention anyways.
That's the thing...I'm with Giganews. So retention shouldn't be a problem.:dabs:

Beck38
04-26-2009, 07:30 AM
For instance, I'm trying to find several episodes of The Office (episodes 5 & 7-11 of season 5), and can't seem to find them anywhere. How do I go about finding them or requesting that they be posted?

You missed a bit on your explanation, like what format and such you were looking for... BUT (!)

These episodes/season 5 do not exist yet (have not been released) in any base format, like DVD. I looked at the upcoming release dates and the best I could come up with is 'maybe' Sept 09.

So, anything you may find on ANY transmission media (torrents OR usenet) will be live capture off television. Then the person doing it has to (hopefully) do the work involved in transforming it into (again) the format you are looking for (dvd, xvid, who know what).

It has been my experience that folks doing tv capture generally don't know what they're doing. I have over 10 years experience doing it, in both standard and now high definition. It takes good equipment, great original signal (hopefully a digital source), and lots of time and effort. The result is, that whether the material is posted on torrents or usenet, usually pretty dismal.

I'm assuming that since you already have some of the episodes, that the 'original source' was off-air (or satellite or cable) and went through some encoder card/box (known or unknown). Then s/w manipulation to cut out the commercials, spruce it up, etc.

There were lots of folks 'back in the day' doing that before DVD's got popular. Just about nobody doing it now. Except the 'thin edge of the wedge' folks dabbling in HiDef.

So, in a nutshell, you're best bet is to wait until it's released (on DVD), unless you find a source, are 'satisfied' with the picture/sound quality, and go from there. Of course, you could spend $xxxx (if you have access to a pristine signal) and do it yourself.

FYI, I have two machines, one about 5 years old I built around a a standard-def capture card (>$2500), and another I built about 8 months ago to do HiDef capture (about the same cost, but drives and capture card cost has dropped significantly in those 5 years!).

So... them's your options.

EXCEPT...!

I didn't stop to think that virtually all the networks now (particularly NBC) 'stream' their prime-time shows through the internet. If you have a decent connection, and can somehow figure out how to 'capture' the steam as it hits your PC/box, then you could take the bits and figure out how to process them for the format you want. An interesting thought. Maybe someone out there has already 'done the homework' (either have or it's a lot easier than I figure), I'll have to spend some time on it in the next few days and see what I can come up with (ramp up 'MR BIG' machine and take a wack at it).

It appears that the NBC site has all the episodes on it (Season 5), the trick will be in somehow storing and manipulating it.

SonsOfLiberty
04-26-2009, 03:25 PM
If you just want to watch that episode you can watch it via Hulu or NBC.

Beck38
04-26-2009, 10:28 PM
If you just want to watch that episode you can watch it via Hulu or NBC.

There does appear to be ways to 'capture' the Adobe Flash streams (.FLV).

One site I immediately hit is:

http://all-streaming-media.com/faq/recording-media-stream/faq-record-download-capture-save-flash-flv-video-http.htm

but there are a wealth of others. How well they work.... well, unknown. That or another scheme is probably what folks are using to 'grab' then 'post' the results. The NBC site uses Flash (.flv), I don't know what Hulu uses, but I'll be some cleaver folks have also figured it out.

It's there, do the 'homework' and see what you can come up with.

SonsOfLiberty
04-27-2009, 01:17 AM
Firefox+Flashgot :)

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/220

I use it on almost all content, there is very few it won't pick up some are just plain stupid the way they protect their video, but there's another add-on that just captures it while it plays, so almost the same thing.

Beck38
04-27-2009, 04:12 AM
Yep, looks like there's a ton of stuff out there to grab the streams and 'have you way with them'.

Like I said in a couple posts earlier, I probably have my head so far up the HD canal right now, that all of this internet/streaming stuff has kinda happened in a bit of a flash (pun intended!).

Actually, I'm right at the point I was some 10 years ago with SD video, ramped up with a machine built around a capture card, getting stuff off broadcast/satellite, editing it with the tools of the day, and going from there. Then, DVD's really (I mean REALLY) took off, and the whole scheme kinda fell flat on it's face.

Burnable DVD's (single layer) were, as I mentioned, right around $5/ea, DVD Decrypter hadn't even come out yet, blah blah blah.

I still am of two minds on this with the HD. The decrypter technology is further advanced, the recordable Blu-Ray media is about the same (~$5 for single layer), the only difference is that there is dual-layer (50GB) erasable Blu-Ray while SD discs have NEVER had a dual-layer (8GB) disc.

And, the wealth of HD material (in Mpeg4 resolution) is in much greater quantity due to cable/satellite HD feeds. Getting it crammed into your machine, editing it, burning it off (all in AVCHD/Mpeg4 format, of course) onto standard (non-Bluray) discs is a bit of a pain, but doable.

But I'm sure that two years from now, the cost curves will intersect such that it will have been an exercise in futility.