Yeah, there seems to be a problem related to that. It appears to be a lie. It actually finishes moving, but never updates the status. Does stopping and starting the torrent fix it? A re-check might work too.
Well, normally we would batch updates and do an update once every week or so, but we decided it'd be better to just iterate quickly this time around and refresh daily with fixes for the things users report. We get feedback much more quickly this way too.
Does it ever turn green? If it does, you're probably okay. But if it doesn't, it's probably Kaspersky's doing. Remove exceptions for uT, reboot, then recreate them. Make sure incoming AND outgoing TCP/UDP traffic is allowed.
We can't really do silent updates unless we stop installing in Program Files, since that requires a UAC prompt. But we're planning such an option for the future.
We're actually planning on replacing the Files tab with the treeview from the Add Torrent dialog at some point. Also, perhaps we can just have the AT dialog refresh itself with metadata and showing a loading spinner. So if you really want to select files beforehand, you can just leave it open until it has the .torrent.
You can always select files after the fact. The files tab allows you to do so. We'll have to evaluate our approach at some point, but I don't think popping up the add dialog after the .torrent metadata is received is the right approach. I'm open to suggestions though.
We changed the order of the keys to make rtorrent happy. Some trackers still break on the negative numbers, and it's still up to them to fix it. It has nothing to do with the hashing algorithm. rtorrent's just overly strict about key order in dictionaries.
Thank you. We do not like change. I fight it with every inch of my being. We often change stuff, but we make it possible to revert to the old look in almost every case, since there's always some users that don't like what we do. You can even split the done and status columns if you hate it so with an Advanced option.
Overload at the beginning of the torrent means that the client is busy allocating the file. Just be patient. USB drives are much slower too, so this first step can take a LOT longer.
We actually don't want to do it that way. It's intrusive (getting the torrent can take a very long time), and it means that your torrent won't start until possibly hours or days later if you aren't there.
Every single client can handle the torrents just fine, honestly. It's just rtorrent. We'll see what exactly makes rtorrent break and we'll consider what to do based on that.