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Is there good version of Kaaza and a good way of getting it?
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To the best of my knowledge, the Fastrack network has been fiddled with to try and prevent hacked versions of the software from getting any usuable connections.
I bring it up because there are various copywrite holders who frequent this site, and think everyone would prefer to avoid a flame war.
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What do you mean by "eliminate"?
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Good question, but I always figured making good use of the delete button--though I suppose we might be missing things to do.
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Suggest you use Windows' Add/Remove tool found in the Control Pannel from now on.
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You're right. 32 gigabytes is a heck of a lot of memory. It's not quite so much discspace, though. Memory is RAM, which is still counted in megabytes.
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Uh huh,
But still, even Megabytes are pretty sizeable.
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Depends on how many of them. 128MB of RAM is barely cutting it if you're running higher end programs. No amount of RAM will prevent bogdown from malware or viruses.
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There is a lady we all knowed.
She said it’s all the cookies.
Yet the cookies seem to take up memory in the kilobytes--mostly single digit kilobytes.
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Not cookies.
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"Not cookies" as they aren't the problem, or they take more than the little memory I suggested they might be taking?
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Not the problem. Cookies are text files or scripts that keep track of user information for websites.
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I downloaded a few non-RIAA tunes and put them in the “Media Library”—thinking they were there at our disposal.
But when I turned on the computer again, I try to play them and they seem to take as long to “buffer” as to download.
I thought I’d download a 3-minute video (MP3) from a website—but the computer said it would take about 8 hours.
Perhaps in time we will try it anyway, and see how long it takes to play from the library (as compared to downloading), but for now, based on my earlier examples, it doesn’t bode well.
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I have no idea what you're talking about here. Connection speed and WMP have little, if anything, to do with each other.
WMP only really buffers files if it's streaming them, ie from a website. In that case, every time you play it, you're redownloading it, which is why it takes just as long.
mp3s are not videos.
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I thought videos could take MP3 form.
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Check out my post replying to Humphry.
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Video quality has nothing to do with the viewer, and everything to do with the ripper. A highly compressed video file will look bad in any program.
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What is "ripper?"
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Someone, or some program, that encodes and/or compresses digital media. When you convert a CD into mp3s, it's said you're ripping it.