
It will present us with a series of options that only pertain to that specific entry that is being downloaded. To do this, we just have to click on it with the right mouse button to access the program’s context menu. On the other hand, it is also worth knowing that if what we want is to interact with each of these files, it is also very simple. In turn, the application offers us a series of functions with which to optimize and customize its operation, as we will see in these same lines. In fact, it could be said that this interface has been designed to facilitate this type of action with the program. At first, it offers us everything we need to manage the upload and download of torrent files, which is its main task. In this way, once the installation of the application is finished, as is usual in this type of program, we find an intuitive user interface. This is something that we can accept or reject, it is the Avast antivirus, so we must pay attention to the windows that appear. The reason for this is that the wizard proposes the installation, in parallel, of another application that may not interest us. Of course, as a warning we will tell you that we must be attentive to the installation process of the program itself. Then we will only have to double click on it so that it is installed on the computer. Overall, we think BitComet is worth trying and could become a major torrent app in the future.Then from that moment on we already have the executable file of the program as such on the PC. While the app held its own against better-known competitors in terms of speed and handling multiple torrents, we found the ubiquitous advertisements to be annoying compared to the competition's ad-free environs.


Among the usual features, BitComet offers chat capabilities, the ability to bookmark your favorite sites, a toolbar for Internet Explorer 7, and a context menu for Firefox 2.

The pane on the right rounds out the layout, with a torrent search feature and advertising. The top of the app has big buttons with familiar icons, the center window shows the files being downloaded, and the bottom pane has tracker and peer info. There's a familiar tree of features on the left, including links to torrent-aggregating Web sites and several promotional offers. Taking a slightly different approach to solving the multimedia lover's dilemma of how best to download torrents is BitComet, which uses an interface heavily cribbed from Windows Explorer-with a dose or two from the basic BitTorrent template-to create something instantly recognizable to the user.
