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  2. Comparison of file hosting services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_file_hosting...

    If you hit the limit your links will be disabled for 24 hours. The bandwidth limits only apply to public links. [65] Tarsnap [66] No free space, unlimited paid $0.25/GiB 16 EiB - 1 No free bandwidth tier, unlimited paid $0.25/GiB Yes No libtarsnap.a [67] No Client must manage archives [68] Optional with `-H` [69] 0 Partial archives [70] No

  3. JDownloader - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JDownloader

    In response a link to the non-adware version was made available but only in a forum post. In June 2013, JDownloader's ability to download copyrighted and protected RTMPE streams was considered illegal by a German court. This feature was never provided in an official build, but was supported by a few nightly builds. [9]

  4. RapidShare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RapidShare

    RapidShare was an online file hosting service that opened in 2002. In 2009, it was among the Internet's 20 most visited websites and claimed to have 10 petabytes of files uploaded by users with the ability to handle up to three million users simultaneously. [1]

  5. Wikipedia:URLShortener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:URLShortener

    Only links shorter than 2,000 characters can be shortened. In order to avoid abuse of the tool, there is a rate limit: Logged-in users can create up to 50 links every 2 minutes. IPs are limited to 10 creations per 2 minutes.

  6. Wikipedia talk:Offline Content Generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Offline...

    We actually had a great Wikimania this year, with a lot of focus on the "Offline Content Generator" (as the architecture behind Book Creator, PDF export, the Collection extension, etc, is formally named). In fact, we had ZIM export and ePub export capabilities developed during the hackathon.

  7. Leecher (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leecher_(computing)

    In games (whether a traditional tabletop RPG, LARPing, or even MMORPG) the term "leech" is given to someone who avoids confrontation and sits out while another player fights and gains experience for the person, or "leecher", who is avoiding confrontation.

  8. WavePad Audio Editor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WavePad_Audio_Editor

    Previously, WavePad and other NCH products came bundled with optional browser plugins like the Ask and Chrome toolbars, which sparked complaints from users and triggered malware warnings from antivirus software companies like Norton and McAfee.