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5 answers

3 things.

1. Room enough to store the movie -
which can be up to 8.5 gigabytes for a DVD.

2. A ton of patience or a very fast broadband connection. Dial-up would take weeks to download a full-length movie.

3. A protocol that allows resuming the download if your Internet connection goes down.

Any of the peer-to-peer protocols such as bit-torrent or gnutella will take care of that. Otherwise, use a download manager such as "Free Download Manager" which will also let you resume downloading where you left off.

See the links below for good clients in the three protocols I've mentioned.

2006-08-10 18:56:18 · answer #1 · answered by Jon W 5 · 0 0

There are no really specific requirments.

If you would share yours, that would be much easier than just telling you a standard.

Usually, if you can use the internet without trouble, downloading movies will not be a problem, unless of course they are gained through illicit means.

2006-08-11 01:34:03 · answer #2 · answered by NA A 5 · 0 0

Merely lots of disc space and a fast internet connection. Now playing movies that have been downloaded, that's a whole other animal but you didn't ask about that.

2006-08-11 01:39:02 · answer #3 · answered by bogus_dude 6 · 0 0

computer pentium 2,3
ram 256 or whatever
vga 64mn
processor 2.6 or less
sound card
and a motherboard of about 40$
and a speakers
and a audio/video program (nothing needed only a very cheap computer)

2006-08-11 01:36:51 · answer #4 · answered by Gohst 2 · 0 0

DSL or cable connection
P111 or above
256 RAM

It works on a 'one step' beloew ' configuration too , however it takes much longer time than normal.

2006-08-11 01:34:59 · answer #5 · answered by rocky 2 · 0 0

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