@lololulu19 Wow, that's amazing. The way you lie like that as if you're stating facts.
Please, do share some reference material to support these allegations.
@lololulu19 Wow, that's amazing. The way you lie like that as if you're stating facts.
Please, do share some reference material to support these allegations.
@raphjd You actually didn't answer the question. What policies were introduced to help people. Since you're not limiting it to LGBTQ+ people, it should be easy to list them.
@blablarg18 I'm curious. Which policies have MAGA Republicans introduced/supported for the benefit of the LGBTQ+ community? How have they helped us?
@lololulu19 Thanks for the information. The torrents are definitely active. Users have begun leeching. But, they are not searchable and don't appear in My Torrents. I've uploaded hundreds of torrents over the years. I rarely have issues with DMA or duplicates. This issue is new. It began to occur in the last 3 or 4 days.
I'm having this issue where I upload a torrent, check that it successfully started and users can access it. Then, a few hours later, I can't find the torrent. It's not on the My Torrents tab. When I search for it by name, file name, description, I can't find it. I haven't received a takedown notice. The torrent is still showing as seeding in my client. But, it doesn't appear to be available for anyone to leech. Thoughts? Ideas?
@ScreamName Yes, I manually add metadata in *.nfo files.
I've installed the linuxserver/transmission image in Docker. This image of Transmission is generic (not specific to a particular device or OS) and is updated regularly. I've mapped my host media volumes into the Docker Transmission volume. From the perspective of Transmission, the host volumes belong to Transmission. It can read/write any mapped volumes. If you're not familiar with Docker, start here. (https://docs.docker.com/get-started/). It took me a good 3 months to become comfortable with Docker enough to configure VPNs, Bit Torrent clients and whatnot. But, once you've got it under your belt, it's awesome. All of my media related activities (NZBs, Torrents) happen within Docker containers behind a VPN that prevent any activity from occurring if the VPN goes down. I don't use any of the SynologyCommunity apps, now. Since they are specific to Synology, they tend to fall behind when it comes to updates.
Besides walking you through the Docker learning curve I'm happy to help in any way I can.
Hi Calatar,
This may not be helpful to you, but I'll answer your questions.
1. Which client are you using on the NAS?
Transmission
2. Which clients allow you to create .torrent files from the NAS directly - as I can't seem to get mine to do it!
I don't use any clients from the NAS directly to create .torrent files. I use QTM to generate the .torrent. Once created, I remove the torrent automatically added to µTorrent. Then, I add the torrent to my NAS client, being careful to point it to the directory where the file(s) I want to upload exist. The client verifies the media, then begins seeding.
3. Does anyone else have problems seeding from the NAS? My ratio has declined continuously since I moved everything over to that NAS I'm using… Sad
I've always had trouble seeding. My downloads far outstrip my uploads. Even when I do freeleech, I can't keep up. I'm making progress by uploading media. I haven't noticed any issues with seeding my own stuff.
4. My current client (qBittorrent from LinuxServer.io) won't allow me to put files back into the download directory and start seeding them again... so I get requests all the time for old torrents that I have the files for... but I can't reseed them Sad
I'm not using qBittorrent, so I don't have any suggestions for you in order to remedy the situation. I will tell you about my setup.
Synology 918+ NAS running Docker.
I've started uploading media which contains metadata related to the movie/clip that is compatible with both Kodi and Plex. There aren't any truly reliable metadata agents out there for individual gay clips. Agents/scrapers for gay DVD's/Blu-Ray are more reliable, but I have way more clips than full length movies.
That said, I'm compiling metadata for my media as I'm organizing it and deciding what to delete When it comes to collections/sets of clips that are related, I have two options. One is to upload them individually and let people decide which they want. The other is to package the entire collection into a single upload. Since the metadata is also included in the upload, some users may mistakenly download portions of the collection that renders the metadata less useful than anticipated. NOTE: Assuming the clip and all related metadata are downloaded and organized properly in the media library, both Plex and Kodi will use this info to create collections and allow the user to see all of the clips that they've downloaded as part of the collection. This will happen if the members of the collection are downloaded together or individually.
What I'd like your opinion on is which of these uploads is most effective.
Collection as individual upload
(Ass Controller Part 1) https://www.gaytorrent.ru/details.php?id=102472595dc12005e7449194aa8400ff6029e357a24ad81f
(Ass Controller Part 2) https://www.gaytorrent.ru/details.php?id=2875e6bf505023a3e7449194aa8400ffc97128619440d632
Collection as a single upload
(After Hours Collection) https://www.gaytorrent.ru/details.php?id=51738be31fd16507e7449194aa8400ff8ee74884ab80c9a2