Mar 18, 2014 11:27 AM EDT
BitTorrent’s Android V2 just launched last month. The company announced the new BitTorrent Android V2, and Bundle-Integrated BitTorrent Software available for Android users. The company had reached 50 million installs. BitTorrent desktop apps, including µTorrent 3.4, add Bundle integration and set the stage for more faster updates.
“We’ve refreshed the UI, and we’ve improved performance, for us, this is about building the best possible utility for our users” stated Pramod Sokke, Senior Product Manager, Mobile. We’ve also updated the apps with top-requested features, including the ability to select and download individual files within a torrent.” The platform was first introduced in 2013, and the company has seen more than 60 million Bundles downloaded. More than 8,000 publishers have signed up. And, 448 new downloads have been added to the library of over 2 million licensed titles.
Last year, the company introduced BitTorrent mobile apps. The new Android V2 unveils a whole new experience to BitTorrent and µTorrent mobile users. The team recently posted on its blog, BitTorrent Android V2 is to solve not just for user needs, but deliver an experience; a real connection. “The V2 Android updates let you get your downloads, wherever you are, more than that, it’s a better way to manage files” wrote Rebecca Chu, Senior Visual Designer, Mobile. The new BitTorrent and µTorrent Android apps feature a re-imagined UI.
About BitTorrent
BitTorrent Inc. is an IT company based in San Francisco. We design distributed technologies that scale efficiently, keep intelligence at the edge, and keep creators and consumers in control of their content and data. More than 170 million people use our products every month. Our protocols move as much as 40% of the world's Internet traffic on a daily basis. Our mission is to build a better Internet. To work with people, industries and nations to create better ways to move information. Better ways for creators to make money. New ways for fans to engage, on their terms. Ways to sustain the stuff we share. The Internet promised us this much. And we promise to make good on it.