How to install Windows 7 from USB - video

seeders: 0 leechers: 0
Added 16 years ago by mafoms in Movies - Other Movies
Downloaded 0 time.
thepiratebay.org
How to install Windows 7 from USB - video
  • Release date: 1 Jan 2016
  • Release year: 2016
  • Runtime: 15 minutes
  • Country: United States
  • Budget: $11,000
Plot:
A woman's racist remark is captured on video by two teenage black girls.

Available in versions:
480p

Torrent Contents Size: 38.5 MB

How to install Windows 7 from USB - video
How to install Windows 7 from USB.wmv
WMV
38.25 MB
ReadmeEn.txt
TXT
674 B
thumbs.jpg
JPG
247.5 KB

Description

Related Torrents

Location

Trackers

Tracker name
udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969/announce
udp://9.rarbg.me:2850/announce
udp://9.rarbg.to:2920/announce
udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337
udp://tracker.leechers-paradise.org:6969/announce
Torrent hash:
Audio Quality
0/10
Video Quality
0/10

Media Information

ⓘ Description Feb 27, 2026

General

Format: WMV

Video Streams

Video Stream 1 WINDOWS MEDIA VIDEO 9 720X576 8K
Resolution: 9720 x 576 (8K/UHD)
Codec: WINDOWS MEDIA VIDEO 9 720X576?Video CodecThe compression method used for the video. Newer codecs keep the same quality with smaller files.
MPEG-2H.264HEVCAV1
OlderMore efficient →
Bit Rate: 1 Mbps?Video Bit RateThe amount of data used per second for the video. Higher generally means better picture quality, but also a larger file.
Frame Rate: 25 fps?Frame RateHow many images are shown per second to create the illusion of motion.
24 fps — Cinema standard (filmic look)
30 fps — Common for TV shows
60 fps — Smooth motion (sports, gaming)
Aspect Ratio: 4:3?Aspect RatioThe shape of the video frame. Wider ratios give a more cinematic look but may show black bars on a standard screen.
16:9
4:3
Black bars on the sides on a 16:9 screen
4:3
16:9
1.85:1
2:1
2.39:1

Audio Streams

Audio Stream 1 ENG
Channels: ?Audio ChannelsMono — a single audio channel, typically for voice or older recordings.
C👤
Sample Rate: 44.1 kHz?Sample RateHow many audio snapshots per second. 48 kHz is the video standard — more than enough for the full range of human hearing.
Bit Rate: 128 kbps?Audio Bit RateData per second for the audio. Higher means better quality for lossy codecs. Lossless audio always preserves full quality regardless of bitrate.