Friday, March 9, 2012

WHAT IS A TORRENT?

torrent-bit-torrentTorrent
A small metadata file which contains information about the data you want to download, not the data itself. It is downloaded from a web site (BitTorrent file extension is .torrent) by clicking on a download link. It can also be saved to your computer. This is useful if you want to be able to re-open the torrent later on without having to find the link again.
Peer
A peer is another computer on the internet that is sharing the file you wish to download. Typically a peer does not have the complete file, if it did it would be called a seed. Peers are also called leeches, to distinguish them from those who have completed their download and continue to leave their BitTorrent Client running and act as a seed.
Seed
A computer that has a complete copy of the specific torrent you are downloading . Once your client finishes downloading, it will remain open until you click the Finish button. This is known as seeding. You can also start a BitTorrent Client with a complete file, and once BitTorrent has checked the file it will connect and seed the file to others. It is good to continue seeding a file after you have finished downloading, to help others finish. Also, when a new torrent is posted to a tracker, someone must seed it in order for it to be available to others. The tracker doesn’t know anything of the actual contents of a file, so it’s important to follow through and seed a file if you upload the torrent to a tracker.
Reseed
When there are zero seeds for a given torrent (and not enough peers to have a distributed copy), all the peers will get stuck with an incomplete file, since no one in the swarm has the missing pieces. When this happens, someone with a complete file (a seed) must connect to the swarm so that those missing pieces can be transferred. This is called reseeding. Usually a request for a reseed comes with an implicit promise that the requester will leave his or her client open for some time period after finishing (to add longevity to the torrent).
Distributed copies
In some versions of the client, you will see “Connected to x seeds; also seeing x.xxx distributed copies.” A seed is a computer with the complete file. However, the swarm can collectively have a complete copy (or copies) of the file, even without seeds a complete distributed copy can be available if the sum total of the users have a complete copy among themselves. BitTorrent doesn’t distribute in sequential order, so this is possible.
Swarm
The group of users that are collectively connected for a particular file. Example, if you start a BitTorrent Client and it tells you that you’re connected to 5 peers and 1 seeds, then the swarm consists of you and those 6 other people.
Tracker
Server on the Internet that coordinates the action of BitTorrent Clients. Upon opening a torrent, you contact the tracker and receive a list of peers to connect to. Throughout the transfer, your computer will query the tracker, telling it how much you’ve downloaded and uploaded and how much before finishing. If a tracker is down and you try to open a torrent, you will be unable to connect. If a tracker goes down during a torrent (you have already connected at some point and are already talking to peers), you will be able to continue transferring with those peers, but no new peers will be able to contact you. Tracker errors are often temporary, leave the client open and continue trying.
Share rating
A ratio of your amount uploaded divided by your amount downloaded. The amounts used are for the current session only, not over the history of the file. If you achieve a share ratio of 1.0, that would mean you’ve uploaded as much as you’ve downloaded. The higher the number, the more you have contributed. If you see a share ratio of this means infinity, which will happen if you open a BitTorrent Client with a complete file (i.e., you seed the file.) In this case you download nothing since you have the full file, and so anything you send will cause the ratio to reach infinity. While share ratings are just displayed for your convenience, courtesy to others should cause you to keep this ratio as high as possible.
Choked
When a connection is choked, it means that the transmitter isn’t currently sending anything else on the link. A BitTorrent Client signals that it’s choked to other clients for a number of reasons, the most common is that by default a client will only maintain –max_uploads active simultaneous uploads, the rest will be marked choked. A connection can also be choked for other reasons, for example a peer downloading from a seed will mark his connection as choked since the seed has no need to receive.
Optimistic unchoking
Periodically, the client shakes up the list of uploaders and tries sending on different connections that were previously choked, and choking the connections it was just using. You can observe this action every 10 or 20 seconds or so, by watching the “Advanced” panel of one of the experimental clients.
Interested
Term used in the protocol specification. refers to the state of a downloader with respect to a connection. A downloader is marked as interested if the other end of the link has any pieces that the client wants, otherwise the connection is marked as not interested.
Snubbed
If the client has not received anything after a certain period (default: 60 seconds), it marks a connection as snubbed, in that the peer on the other end has chosen not to send. See the definition of choked for reasons why an uploader might mark a connection as choked. The real function of keeping track of this variable is to improve download speeds. Occasionally the client will find itself in a state where even though it is connected to many peers, it is choked by all of them. The client uses the snubbed flag in an attempt to prevent this situation. It notes that a peer with whom it would like to trade pieces with has not sent anything in a while, and rather than leaving it up to the optimistic choking to eventually select that peer, it instead reserves one of its upload slots for sending to that peer.

ANDROID


What is Android??? Android is a software stack for mobile devices that includes an operating system, middleware and key applications. The Android SDK provides the tools and APIs necessary to begin developing applications on the Android platform using the Java programming language.
Android is a Linux based operating system for mobile devices such as smartphones and tablet computers. It is developed by the Open Handset Alliance led by Google.The first android tablet was released in 2006, a year before the Apple iPad 1. Google purchased the initial developer of the software, Android Inc., in 2005.The unveiling of the Android distribution in 2007 was announced with the founding of the Open Handset Alliance, a consortium of 86 hardware, software, and telecommunication companies devoted to advancing open standards for mobile devices. Google releases the Android code as open-source, under the Apache License. The Android Open Source Project (AOSP) is tasked with the maintenance and further development of Android.File:Galaxy Nexus smartphone.jpg
Android has a large community of developers writing applications ("apps") that extend the functionality of the devices. Developers write primarily in a customized version of Java. Apps can be downloaded from third-party sites or through online stores such as Android Market, the app store run by Google. As of October 2011 there were more than 400,000 apps available for Android, and the estimated number of applications downloaded from the Android Market as of December 2011 exceeded 10 billion.
Android was listed as the best-selling smartphone platform worldwide in Q4 2010 by Canalys with over 200 million Android devices in use by November 2011. According to Google’s Andy Rubin, as of December 2011 there are over 700,000 Android devices activated every day.

Features

  • Application framework enabling reuse and replacement of components
  • Dalvik virtual machine optimized for mobile devices
  • Integrated browser based on the open source WebKitengine
  • Optimized graphics powered by a custom 2D graphics library; 3D graphics based on the OpenGL ES 1.0 specification (hardware acceleration optional)
  • SQLite for structured data storage
  • Media support for common audio, video, and still image formats (MPEG4, H.264, MP3, AAC, AMR, JPG, PNG, GIF)
  • GSM Telephony (hardware dependent)
  • Bluetooth, EDGE, 3G, and WiFi (hardware dependent)
  • Camera, GPS, compass, and accelerometer (hardware dependent)
  • Rich development environment including a device emulator, tools for debugging, memory and performance profiling, and a plugin for the Eclipse IDE

KNOW ALL THE EXTENSIONs (A-Z)


FILE EXTENSION A-Z

A
  .a – library (unix)
  .ad – screen saver data (AfterDark)
  .adi – graphics (AutoCAD)
  .adl – MCA adapter description library (QEMM) 
  .afi – Truevision bitmap graphics
  .afm – Type 1 font metric ASCII data for font installer (ATM – many)
  .all – format file for working pages (Always)
  .all – general printer information (WordPerfect for Win)
  .ani – animation (Presidio – many)
  .anm – animation (Deluxe Paint Animator)
  .ans – ANSI graphics (character animation)
  .ans – ASCII text ANSI character set (NewWave Write)
  .asc – ASCII text file
  .avi – Audio Video Interleaved animation file (Video for Windows)
B
  .bak – backup file
  .bas – BASIC source code file
  .bat – batch file (DOS) 
  .bbm – brush (Deluxe Paint)
  .bbs – Bulletin Board System announce or text info file
  .bch – batch process object file (dBASE Application Generator)
  .bcp – Borland C++ makefile
  .bdf – Bitmap Distribution Format font file (X11)
  .bga – bitmap graphics
  .bib – bibliography (ASCII)
  .bib – database – not compatible with TeX format (Papyrus)
  .bib – literature database (TeX/BibTeX)
  .bif – Binary Image Format b&w graphics (Image Capture board)
  .bin – binary file 
  .bio – OS2 BIOS
  .bit – bitmap X11
  .bm – BitMap graphics
  .bmk – Help Bookmarks (Windows 3.x)
  .bmp – BitMaP graphics (PC Paintbrush – many)
  .bpt – bitmap fills file (CorelDRAW)
  .btm – Batch To Memory batch file (4DOS)
  .bup – backup file
C
  .c – C source code file
  .c – compressed unix file archive created by COMPACT
  .c++ – C++ source code file
  .cal – calendar file (Windows 3.x)
  .cal – spreatsheet (SuperCalc)
  .cbl – COBOL source code file
  .cbm – compiled bitmap graphics (XLib)
  .cbt – Computer Based Training (many)
  .cc – C++ source code file
  .ceg – bitmap graphics (Tempra Show – Edsun Continuous Edge Graphics)
  .cga – CGA display font (Ventura Publisher)
  .chk – recovered data (DOS CHKDSK)
  .chk – temporary file (WordPerfect for Win)
  .clp – clip art graphics (Quattro Pro)
  .clp – clipboard file (Windows 3.x)
  .cls – C++ class definition file
  .cmd – batch file (OS/2)
  .cmd – command (dBASE – Waffle)
  .cmd – external command menu (1st Reader)
  .cpp – C++ source code file
  .cpp – presentation (CA-Cricket Presents)
  .cpt – compressed Mac file archive created by COMPACT PRO (ext-pc.zip)
  .cur – cursor image file (Windows 3.x)
D
  .dat – data file in special format or ASCII
  .dbd – debug info (Clarion Modula-2)
  .dbg – symbolic debugging information (MS C/C++)
  .dcf – disk image file
  .dd – compressed Macintosh file archive created by DISKDOUBLER
  .deb – DEBUG script (DOS Debug)
  .def – defaults – definitions
  .dem – demonstration
  .dem – graphics (VistaPro)
  .dgs – diagnostics
  .dic – dictionary
  .dir – directory file (VAX)
  .diz – description file (Description In Zip)
  .dlg – dialog resource script file (MS Windows SDK)
  .dll – Dynamic Link Library (Windows 3.x – OS/2)
  .dll – export/import filter (CorelDRAW)
  .dmp – dump file (eg. screen or memory)
  .doc – document text file
  .dos – network driver (eg. pkt_dis.dos)
  .dos – text file containing DOS specific info
  .drv – device driver eg. for printer
  .dsk – project desktop file (Borland C++ – Turbo Pascal)
.dss – screensaver file (DCC)
E
  .ega – EGA display font (Ventura Publisher)
  .emu – terminal emulation data (BITCOM)
  .env – Enveloper macro (WOPR)
  .env – environment file (WordPerfect for Win)
  .err – error log
  .err – error messages for command line compilers
  .esh – Extended Shell batch file
  .exc – REXX source code file (VM/CMS)
  .exc – exclude file for Optimize (do not process) ( QEMM)
  .exe – directly executable program (DOS)
  .exm – MSDOS executable, system-manager compliant (HP calculator)
  .ext – extension file (Norton Commander)
F
  .fac – FACE graphics
  .faq – Frequently Asked Questions text file
  .fax – fax (raster graphics) (most Fax programs)
  .fdw – form (F3 Design and Mapping)
  .fix – patch file
  .frm – form (Visual Basic)
  .ftp – configuration (FTP Software PC/TCP)
  .fx – on-line guide (FastLynx)
  .fxd – phonebook (FAXit)
G
  .gbl – global definitions (VAXTPU editor)
  .gfb – compressed GIF image created by GIFBLAST (gifblast.exe)
  .gft – font (NeoPaint)
  .gif – Graphics Interchange Format bitmap graphics (CompuShow)
  .gly – glossary (MS Word)
  .gph – graph (Lotus 1-2-3/G)
  .gr2 – screen driver (Windows 3.x)
  .grb – MS-DOS Shell Monitor file (MS-DOS 5)
  .grp – group file (Windows 3.x – Papyrus)
H
  .hlp – help information
  .hof – Hall Of Fame (game scores)
  .hp8 – ASCII text HP Roman8 character set (NewWave Write)
  .htm – HTML document (Mosaic)
  .htx – Hypertext file
I
.iax – bitmap graphics (IBM Image Access eXecutive)
  .ibm – compressed file archive created by ARCHDOS (Internal IBM only)
  .icn – ICON source code file
  .ico – icon (Windows 3.x)
  .id – disk identification file
  .ifs – system file (OS/2) hpfs.ifs
  .img – bitmap graphics (Ventura Publisher – GEM Paint)
  .inc – include file (several programming languages)
  .inf – information text file (ASCII)
  .inf – install script
  .ini – initialization file
  .ins – (WordPerfect) wp51.ins
  .ins – installation script (1st Reader)
J
  .jas – graphics
  .jbd – datafile (SigmaScan)
  .jpc – graphics (Japan PIC)
  .jpg – JPEG Joint Photography Experts Group format bitmap graphics
  .jtf – graphics (TIFF file with JPEG compression)
K
  .key – security file eg. Shareware Registration info
  .kps – IBM KIPS bitmap graphics
  .kyb – keyboard mapping (FTP Software PC/TCP)
L
  .lbm – bitmap graphics (DeluxePaint)
  .lbm – linear bitmap graphics (XLib)
  .lcl – (FTP Software PC/TCP)
  .ldb – (MS Access)
  .lgo – startup logo code (Windows 3.x)
  .lib – library file (several programming languages)
  .lis – listing (VAX)
  .log – log file
  .lpc – printer driver (TEKO)
M
  .m3d – 3D animation macro
  .mac – bitmap graphics (Macintosh MacPaint)
  .mac – macro 
  .mai – mail (VAX)
  .mak – makefile
  .mak – project file (Visual Basic)
  .man – command manual
  .map – color palette
  .map – format data (Micrografx Picture Publisher)
  .map – linker map file
  .map – map (Atlas MapMaker)
  .map – network map (AccView)
  .mbx – mailbox data (ZERBERUS)
  .mci – MCI command script (Media Control Interface)
  .mcp – printer driver (Mathcad)
  .mcw – text file (MacWrite II)
  .mdm – modem definition (TELIX)
  .meu – menu group (DOS Shell)
  .mid – standard MIDI file (music synthetizers)
  .mke – makefile (MS Windows SDK)
  .mod – MODULA-2 source code file (Clarion Modula-2)
  .mod – Windows kernel module
  .mon – monitor description (ReadMail)
  .mov – movie (AutoCAD AutoFlix) 
  .mp2 – MPEG audio file (xing)
  .mpc – calender file (MS Project)
  .mpg – MPEG animation
  .msg – message
  .msp – bitmap graphics (Microsoft Paint)
  .mst – setup script (MS Windows SDK)
  .mth – math file (Derive)
  .mtm – MultiTracker Module music
  .mtw – datafile (Minitab)
  .mu – menu (Quattro Pro)
  .mus – sound file (MusicTime)
  .mvf – stop frame file (AutoCAD AutoFlix)
  .mvi – movie command file (AutoCAD AutoFlix)
  .mvw – log file (Saber LAN)
  .mxt – (MS C)
N
  .nws – info text file (latest news) (ASCII)
  .nxt – sound (NeXT format)
O
  .obj – object code (Intel Recolatable Object Module)
  .ocx – OLE custom control
  .off – Object File Format vector graphics
  .old – backup file
  .ovl – overlay file (part of program to be loaded when needed)
  .ovr – overlay file (part of program to be loaded when needed)
P
  .pac – STAD Image (graphics ?)
  .pac – package (SBStudio II)
  .pal – color palette
  .par – permanent output file (Windows 3.x)
  .pcc – cutout picture vector graphics (PC Paintbrush)
  .pch – patch file
  .pct – bitmap graphics (Macintosh b&w PICT1 – color PICT2)
  .pcw – text file (PC Write)
  .pcx – bitmap graphics (PC Paintbrush)
  .pda – bitmap graphics
  .pdv – printer driver (Paintbrush)
  .pgm – Portable Grayscale bitMap graphics
  .pgm – program (Signature)
  .pgp – support file (Pretty Good Privacy RSA System)
  .pgs – manual page (man4dos)
  .pic – PIXAR picture file (SDSC Image Tool)
  .pic – bitmap graphics (Macintosh b&w PICT1 – color PICT2)
  .pic – bitmap graphics (many eg. Lotus 1-2-3 – PC Paint)
  .pif – Program Information File (Windows 3.x)
  .pif – vector graphics GDF format (IBM mainframe computers)
  .pit – compressed Mac file archive created by PACKIT (unpackit.zoo)
  .pll – pre-linked library (Clipper 5)
  .pnt – Macintosh painting
  .pop – messages index (PopMail)
  .pop – pop-up menu object (dBASE Application Generator)
  .prd – printer driver (many)
  .pub – public key ring file (Pretty Good Privacy RSA System)
Q
  .qpr – print queue device driver (OS/2)
  .qpx – compiled query program (FoxPro)
  .qrt – QRT ray tracing graphics
  .qry – query (dBASE IV)
  .qt – QuickTime movie (animation)
  .qwk – QWK reader message file
  .qxd – document (QuarkXPress)
  .qxl – element library (QuarkXPress)
R
  .rdi – device-independent bitmap file (RIFF RDIB format)
  .rdx – datafile (Reflex)   
  . rec – datafile (EpiInfo)
  .rec – record file (Sprint)
  .rec – recorded macro file (Windows 3.x)
  .red – path info (Clarion Modula-2)
  .ref – cross-reference
  .reg – OLE Registration (Windows 3.x)
  .reg – registration (Corel programs)
  .rem – remarks
  .rgb – SGI RGB image file (SDSC Image Tool)
  .rif – RIFF bitmap graphics (Fractal Design Painter)
  .rip – graphics (Remote Access)
  .rix – bitmap graphics (ColorRIX VGA Paint)
  .rmk – makefile (RMAKE)
  .rpt – report
  .rtf – Windows Help file script
  .rtl – text file
S
  .sav – backup file (saved file)
  .sav – configuration
  .sav – saved game situation (eg. NetHack)
  .sbd – storyboard (Storyboard Editor)
  .sbi – Sound Blaster Instrument file (Creative Labs)
  .sbr – support file (Source Browser)
  .scc – text file
  .scr – DEBUG source code file (DOS Debug)
  .scr – screen saver (Windows 3.x)
  .scx – bitmap graphics (ColorRIX)
  .sea – Self-Extracting compressed Macintosh file Archive
  .sec – secret key ring file (Pretty Good Privacy RSA System)
  .sec – secured animation file (Disney Animation Studio)
  .set – setup options file
  .sgi – graphics (IRIS – Silicon Graphics) 
  .sig – current program settings (Signature)
  .sig – signature file (PopMail)
  .sit – compressed Macintosh archive created by STUFFIT (unsit30.zip)
  .smp – sample (sound file)
  .smt – text file (Smart Ware II)
  .snd – digitized sound file (Macintosh/ATARI/PC)
  .spl – sample
  .sum – Summary
  .swp – swap file (DOS)
  .sys – datafile (SYGRAPH – SYSTAT – SPSS/PC)
  .sys – system file – device driver or hardware configuration info (DOS)
T
  .tbl – graphics (native format) (PageMaker TableEditor)
  .tbl – table of values (OS/2)
  .tel – host file (Telnet)
  .tga – TrueVision Targa bitmap graphics
  .tmp – temporary file
  .toc – Table Of Contents
  .tre – directory tree file (PC-Tools)
  .trm – terminal settings (Windows 3.x)
  .tut – tutorial
U
  .ub – audio file (unsigned byte)
  .uhs – Universal Hint System (binary file)
  .uif – long prompts for windows (WordPerfect for Win)
  .unx – text file containing UNIX specific info
  .upd – program update info
  .usr – user database file (Procomm Plus – Turbo C++ tour)
V
  .vbx – Visual Basic eXtension (Visual Basic)
  .vga – VGA display driver
  .vga – VGA display font 
  .vgd – VGA display driver (Generic CADD)
  .vid – MS-DOS Shell Monitor file (MS-DOS 5)
  .vid – bitmap graphics (YUV12C M-Motion Frame Buffer)
  .vid – screen device driver (Word)
  .voc – digitized samples (Creative Voice file)
  .vst – Truevision Vista bitmap graphics
  .vue – animation (3D Studio)
  .vxd – Windows 3.x virtual device driver (QEMM)
W
  .w31 – startup file (Windows 3.1)
  .wav – Waveform audio file (RIFF WAVE format)
  .wbf – MS Windows Batch File (Catch) 
  .wbt – batch file (WinBatch)
  .web – WEB source code file
  .woa – swap file (Windows 3.x)
  .wrs – Windows Resource eg. printer driver (WordPerfect for Win)
X
  .xbm – X11 Bitmap graphics
  .xll – Excel Dynamic Link Library (MS Excel)
  .xmi – compressed eXtended MIdi music
  .xwd – X Window System window dump image graphics (SDSC Image Tool)
  .xx – compressed file ASCII archive created by XXENCODE (uuexe515.exe)
  .xxe – compressed file ASCII archive created by XXENCODE (uuexe515.exe)
Z
  .zip – compressed file archive created by PKZIP (pkz204g.exe)
  .zoo – compressed file archive created by ZOO (zoo210.exe)