Download a file over the network using the eDonkey2000 magnet-links by regular means can not, however MLdonkey Protocol Handler plugin for Firefox allows you when you click on a link magnet-convert it to ed2k and send in eMule. Download files via magnet-link torrent protocol can be used and the program μTorrent. To do this, make sure that you have turned on in the settings of the "network DHT" mode and "peer exchange" (Settings -> Configuration -> BitTorrent), then add a magnet-link to the list of files to download (File -> Add Torrent from URL .. .). μTorrent users can try to download the reduced magnet-link.
@Humphrey why post checksums of original Update 0 ? answer: because they are required to be installed before Update 3 is applied
If I install the Visual Studio Update 3 after installing this file from the OP will it overwrite any kind of activation? Thanks
There's also the reality that there would be massive (and monstrous) resistance from developers to merely an x64 option for VS - even if were licensed the same way Office (which is now in both x32 and x64 for most SKUs) is. Further, on this subject, could an x64 version of VS even write x32 code? We have historical evidence that x32 VS can indeed compile not merely hybrid code, but pure x64 code - it has been doing so for a not-insignificant period of time. However, has anyone come up with a pure x64 development environment that can write either hybrid code or pure x32 code? So far, I have not seen a pure x64 IDE from anyone, or for any OS - which makes the point rather neatly. (A similar question was asked about the original x64 version of Office - 2010, and it had to do specifically with Word and Outlook, and whether there was ANY benefit to either going entirely x64. It turns out that there were benefits to moving entirely to x64, even for Word and Outlook - however, especially for Outlook, Microsoft had to do some seriously heavy lifting. Unlike Excel or Access, neither Word or Outlook is compute-intensive; however, Outlook in particular is background-task intensive - add-ins and plug-ins can add even more background tasking. And take a gander on just the add-in and plug-in list for Outlook alone (as of Outlook 2010) and see just how many of those add-ins and plug-ins were written by Microsoft itself for their own services. One surefire method of reducing the number of add-ins and plug-ins you have to convert is twofold - cull little-used and unused add-ins and plug-ins AND make the more commonly-used such native features - hence, no need for an add-in OR plug-in.)