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Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
With my VDSL Connection I always use Direct Downloads, while the most seeds are too slow.
@linux dist size:
Net Images are 100-250Mb large
minimal ISO's are 200-400Mb
Alternate Installers are often 600-700
And Desktop/Live ISO's are 650Mb - 4,5Gb
Everything so far leads me to think it will be a very stripped down Linux environment, so I wouldn't be surprised if it's only a couple hundred MBs. One of the heaviest components in a standard Linux install is the DE + software like office suites, image editors, web browsers, etc.
Evidence suggests that the Steam Client is taking over lots of DE-specific tasks, so probably they'll only use a lightweight window manager (and there's some pretty lightweight WMs out there, dwm is only 20KB) or roll their own. And I very much doubt they'll include stuff like Libreoffice or Gimp or Thunderbird.
Well, that's just the way it is in the Linux world (and my experiences are similar to yours; I don't go with the torrents, usually). I suspect it's because a lot of people aren't bothering with torrents when they grab a distro (I usually go to netinst CDs whenever possible, myself).
The Windows and Mac worlds think differently, though, and throughput is generally very good on a popular torrent, which I imagine a lot of Windows/Mac users would go to. I have no doubt that SteamOS, when it's released, will generate a lot of initial interest (esp. if they have a live CD); if they provide a torrent, it'll probably be well-seeded enough to saturate anyone's downstream bandwidth.
There are 5 content delivery servers for Germany alone in different cities. As someone already said Bittorrent doesn't overlock your internet.
I categorically cannot torrent, it takes an entire week to get a gb downloaded. :\
In the end the limit is your connection speed unless the servers are flooded..