Those who actually paid for the latest version must feel silly for giving away their money , for some skins and search engines
Those who actually paid for the latest version must feel silly for giving away their money , for some skins and search engines
well i suppose its more convenient to have them all at one place and it allows you to download things more easy and set individual download path right away before putting something into a download queue which i didnt find how to do without them. I had to change download folder only from downlaod queue window(had them imported paused)
Its a one-time payment. But what really puts me off in the first place is aggressive drm protection- altbinz connects to its server every time you launch it. Once it was unavailable... well you got the idea lol
Last edited by Hypatia; 04-03-2012 at 07:32 AM.
I've got a 40 Mbit connection, though I've never really monitored the process so closely to see if the Yenc decoding "keeps up". Am I supposed to sit and watch my downloads? I know that I would usually queue up all my stuff at about the same time and make a sandwich or do some other thing, and when I get back all of it is done. Let me know if I've been doing it wrong.
Thanks for the info, if I ever feel the need to uproot my current installation, I'll know I have the option for a newer, faster, better bloated Alt-ernative.
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well i didnt watch closely =), i just have process explorer in tray and i see clearly high spikes of activity related to altbinz when it decodes stuff. Too much of an activity(cpu-based) to be honest.
How much difference in cpu is there between alt.binz and usenet explorer?
dude this new ver runs way less ram then the previous version.. just disable all the extras, why would u leave most of the useless tabs and buttons and functions running then say its a resource hog... just like ff, its only expensive if you have massive amounts of addons, although ff does open shitloads of plugin.exe's just to clear the history, not get of subject.
love this new version
Pimpn aint easy ®
what extras? how the f disabling or enabling extras can possibly affect decoding speed and how much CPU decoding process utilizes?
in terms of decoding its one of the worst piece of code ive seen
Last edited by Hypatia; 04-05-2012 at 12:09 AM.
Your CPU utilization graph will look like a series of mesas - each mesa representing a text-to-binary decoding cycle- and the faster your download speed, the closer together these mesas get. When the valleys between mesas disappear (which for this decade-old laptop was @ about 20 megabit/sec download speed) then the decoding starts getting backlogged, which besides suffering from the usual problems of a maxed-out processor, it means the PC is at that point running at its fastest effective download speed, regardless of the actual line speed.
There are also ways to set thread priority/CPU utilization so Alt.Binz's decoding spikes don't cause delays with other running processes. My main concern would be how fast is a newsreader allowed to download before maxing out the processor continuously. So for me right now, it's not a big issue. But if I had a gigabit internet connection (and anything less than a "super"-computer) alt.binz would obviously be totally unsuitable.
Just as a casual observation, it seemed to me that most other news clients I've tried, such as Grabit, BNR, NNTPgrab, Xnews, and others used at least as much CPU as Altbinz, though I've never done a formal comparison. (Usenet Explorer is exceptional - kind of like the µTorrent of news clients.) One problem is that news clients have traditionally written downloaded articles to HDD, then turned around and read them back off HDD when decoding (rather than just holding the 15 or 50 MB worth of articles in memory) so that the excess read/write redundancy adds to decoding. I'm not sure if altbinz's settings allow changing this, but I think i remember that function being added a year or so ago.
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