While the app’s interface is the same, re-engineering it to 64-bit required major surgery, and a lot of tricky coding. You can order the Windows version on this page, and the Mac version on this page. Some users have reported this error message: If you bought SuperNZB after January 1, 2016, send an email to the address at the bottom of the support page, and we will send you a free key. “The program can’t start because api-ms-win-crt-runtime-|1-1-0.dll is missing from your computer.”Īpparently, you can get this when you are running an older version of Windows and not allowing operating-system updates. Fixing it requires installing a thing called the Universal Runtime. For some background reading on the subject, see this page.Ĭlick here if you are upgrading from an older version. SuperNZB’s Downloader Window can be opened from the File Menu. The list of Usenet servers that you see on the Downloader is created when this window opens up. It looks at the servers you have set up on the Servers window, sees which ones are “active” and then uses the “connections” number to create the list.Įach line you see is a “connection” and each server will usually have more than one connection. So, if you have entered the TechSono server with five connections, you will see: SuperNZB takes the server name you entered, and then adds a dash, and a number for each connection to create the server name you see here. If you change something on the Servers window, you must close the Downloader and then re-open it to see the changes. You can turn a connection on-and-off while the Downloader is running via the check-box at the left. The State column shows what the connection is doing. First, it connects to the server, then it sends your username, then your password, then asks for a post, receives a post, etc. The Errors column shows the number of errors the server has returned on that connection. These are server & handshaking types of errors, and don’t indicate whether or not the file being downloaded is corrupt. They are usually nothing to worry about, but are an indication as to how reliable the server is. The MB column shows the total number of megabytes downloaded by that connection. The Speed column shows how fast the current post is being downloaded. This usually starts out slow and then increases since there is some time-consuming handshaking that must go on as SuperNZB asks the server for a post. Next to the Speed column are progress bars, which show you how much of the current post has downloaded as a percentage.
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