Why Akami Sucks Today!
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Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
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Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
Mario Luis wrote:
nd it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!
That definitely sucks. I cannot understand why they insist forcing their customers using bullshit download managers. :)
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles] -
Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
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This is the CodProject...
You should never use standby on an elephant. It always crashes when you lift the ears. - Mark Wallace C/C++ (I dont see a huge difference between them, and the 'benefits' of C++ are questionable, who needs inheritance when you have copy and paste) - fat_boy
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Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
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Nope. Akami is Microsofts custom download manager. I think it helps access local mirrors for microsoft files as well but it's basicly a download manager, just not a very good, or even decent one. Love Sushi. Bring on da WASABI :-D
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Nope. Akami is Microsofts custom download manager. I think it helps access local mirrors for microsoft files as well but it's basicly a download manager, just not a very good, or even decent one. Love Sushi. Bring on da WASABI :-D
Mario Luis wrote:
Nope. Akami is Microsofts custom download manager. I think it helps access local mirrors for microsoft files as well but it's basicly a download manager, just not a very good, or even decent one
With all the experts housed a Microsoft campus, it truely amazes me why they didn't write thier own.
Two heads are better than one.
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This is the CodProject...
You should never use standby on an elephant. It always crashes when you lift the ears. - Mark Wallace C/C++ (I dont see a huge difference between them, and the 'benefits' of C++ are questionable, who needs inheritance when you have copy and paste) - fat_boy
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So it is food, specifically fish.
Join the cool kids - Come fold with us[^]
It's a specific cut from the bluefin tuna[^], and the default if not specified (i.e. the cheap one: think "Steak" instead of "Sirloin").
You should never use standby on an elephant. It always crashes when you lift the ears. - Mark Wallace C/C++ (I dont see a huge difference between them, and the 'benefits' of C++ are questionable, who needs inheritance when you have copy and paste) - fat_boy
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Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
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Because it does. No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!:mad:
Mario Luis wrote:
No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!
Which is odd--I was using IE and it wanted to install the download manager, etc., and then I had to reboot my computer in the middle of the transfer and I was hoping that it would restart the file transfer automatically, no such luck, and going back to the download page, nothing would happen--I'd get a "your download will begin shortly" followed by the browser going back to the MSDN page! So I fired up Chrome (which I normally use, don't know why I was wasting my time with IE) and clicked on the download button, and instead of some stupid file transfer app needing to install, it just started downloading the ISO! 2 hours later I was good to go! Marc
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Mario Luis wrote:
No throttle option and from the blogs I've read has a whole host of other issues and it's the only way to download VS2010 from MSDN?!
Which is odd--I was using IE and it wanted to install the download manager, etc., and then I had to reboot my computer in the middle of the transfer and I was hoping that it would restart the file transfer automatically, no such luck, and going back to the download page, nothing would happen--I'd get a "your download will begin shortly" followed by the browser going back to the MSDN page! So I fired up Chrome (which I normally use, don't know why I was wasting my time with IE) and clicked on the download button, and instead of some stupid file transfer app needing to install, it just started downloading the ISO! 2 hours later I was good to go! Marc