Integrates well with Ubuntu UI, sitting up in the menu tray. SteadyFlow – nice and tidy but light on features. Some of the apps I reviewed had more advanced features, which I discuss in my below review: Steadyflow Download Manager Finally there is scheduling: the ability to schedule a download to start, perhaps when you aren’t using the Internet, or your broadband service is faster like during the night. For example, if you download movies and you only the movies you download to be throttled rate of 10mbps, you can do that in a ‘movies’ group, all other downloads would be grouped differently, and so on. Another feature which some find handy is the notion of ‘grouping’, which means that you can treat some downloads differently to others. It also would be great if it supported multi-segment downloads. The site I regularly use has standard HTTP authentication on it, so for me, the app had to support that. I downloaded the following apps from the Ubuntu Software Repository in Ubuntu 14.04 to try and find the best for my needs.
FLAREGET COMMAND LINE MOVIE
How many times have you downloaded a large Linux ISO image or a movie file to find out that the download broke at 99%? The purpose of Download managers are two-fold, they speed up your download by downloading multiple segments of a file concurrently, and they will resume any broken downloads (provided the server they are on supports it – thankfully most do). Downloading via a web browser is notoriously bad at doing this.
Recently I needed to download a bunch of large files from HTTP sources. How I got my job in Linux: from Newbie to Pro.
FLAREGET COMMAND LINE HOW TO