1: General 
Q. How old do you have to be to watch the movies?
A. You must be 18 years of age to watch the movies. You may not allow any minor
to view any of the materials or images found by accessing this site. By
ordering, you are releasing and discharging the providers, owners, and creators
of this site from any and all liability that might arise. You must understand
and acknowledge that you may be in violation of local and federal laws if you
breach any of these terms and conditions.
Q. What is the difference between Download and Streaming?
A. The difference between downloading a movie and streaming is simple;
streaming allows users to watch a movie in real time with a buffering period.
Viewers are limited by the speed of their connection and network congestion.
Downloaded movies reside locally on the end users PC, therefore not
encountering the same limitations as streaming. Downloaded movies may take a
little longer to download as our file sizes are larger, but the results will be
a high-quality full-screen viewing experience.
Q. What if I want to change my information?
A. For any changes to your information, to get your password resent to you, or
check the status of your account, go to "My Account"

2: How It Works 
3 Easy Steps To Get Started:
1. Signup for your free user account
2. Buy Time (its fast, easy and secured)
3. Choose the movies you want to watch.and have fun.
Watch Best Porn Movies On Your Computer:
Our web site makes finding movies simple and convenient.
Watch The Way You Want
We offer the most diverse way to watch movies online. You can watch the movies
on your Computer or TV.
Pay only for what you watch with our pay-per-minute system.
The Best Way To Watch a movie on the Web!
Pay-Per-Minute
Our most popular way to watch movies, pay for streaming videos by the minute
and only pay for what you watch.
Only 0,06$ for a pur pleasure minute.
Getting Started
1. First set up your free user account.
2. After you set up your account, you will need to purchase
one of our time packages
3. Once you have time in your account, logon on the site with
your username and password and find a movie you like. You don't have to choose
the speed of the streaming. It's working only with Windows Media Player ( min.
version 9.0) and the speed of your connections is detected by ours sites.
As the movie plays time is deducted from your account. Watch all or parts of as
many movie as you want, your time will never expire. To check your available
time, logon on an affiliated site and click on "MY ACCOUNT"
3: Pay-Per-Minute 
Q. How does the pay-per-minute system for viewing movies work?
A. First set up your free user account.
A. After you set up My Account, you will need to purchase one of our time
packages.
A. Once you have time in your account, logon on the site with your username and
password and find a movie you like. You don't have to choose the speed of the
streaming. It's working only with Windows Media Player ( min. version 9.0) and the speed
of your connections is detected by ours sites. As the movie plays time is
deducted from your account. Watch as all or parts of as many movie as you want,
your time will never expire. When you get low on minutes you can add more time
(Buy Time).
Q. Can I watch movies in both real or windows
format?
A. Not with Real Player. Only with Windows Media Player. You must have minutes
in your account.
A. You will need to download the last Windows Media Player version.
( minimum version 9.0)
Q. What connection speed do I need?
A. The streams range from 56K up to 512K. Our Media server will detect the
correct connection speed depending of your Internet speed connection.
Q. Does my time ever expire?
A. Your time never expires. There will be time in My Account until you use it
all.
Q. How do I check how much time I have left?
A. Logon on one of ours sites, click on "My Account".

4: Technical Concerns 
Video Doesn’t Play
Why do I get “Server busy†or “Network Error†in Windows Media Player?
You can correct this by using HTTP protocol.
-
Tools menu --> Options
-
Network tab
-
Uncheck Multicast, UDP, and TCP
-
Click OK
-
Movies will play normally
Why does Windows Media player say connect to the internet?
Sometimes Windows Media Player doesn’t detect a permanent Internet connection
-
Tools menu --> options
-
Player tab --> Check “Connect to the Internetâ€
The option is not present on WMP v8. Upgrade to v9 if possible. A workaround is
described at Microsoft©’s website.
Video not clear or no video
Why do I have no video in Windows Media Player?
Our videos are for Windows Media Player 9. They will play in earlier versions
but without the video codec, only the sound can be heard. Install the codecs
from Microsoft©:
Why is the picture blurry or still?
A low bit rate stream will not be as clear as a high bandwidth stream. In the
extreme case, a very low bandwidth setting (28.8k) can cause the user to only
receive audio. Make sure that the player bandwidth settings are appropriate and
the user is selecting the correct stream bit rate.
In Windows Media Player
-
Tools menu --> Options
-
Performance tab --> Choose connection speed 768kbps (56k for dial-up)
Why won't content play?
The server may be down, the file may not be in a supported format, the
content may have been moved, or the URL to the content may be wrong. If you are
using Netscape Navigator 6, you may be experiencing problems that are caused by
a redesign of the plug-in architecture in that browser. This redesign has
resulted in some loss of backward compatibility. In these situations, there is
nothing that you can do.
If the content is embedded in a Web page, try clicking the player's video
screen. In some cases, network congestion may cause the player to time out;
keep trying, or try again later when the network is less congested.
Why can I play content from some sites but not others?
Your computer may be behind a firewall that has not had the
appropriate ports opened for use with Netshow Services. However, if a server
has HTTP streaming enabled, Windows Media Player can take advantage of its
protocol rollover capabilities and receive the file through HTTP instead of the
typical (and optimal) streaming protocols. This is why you can receive content
from some sites but not others. For the best quality and consistent results,
encourage your administrator to open the appropriate ports on the firewall to
permit streaming. Other issues that might prevent you from being able to play
the content include: The media may not be created in a supported format, Or you
may not have access to the appropriate codec that is required to playback the
file.
Content plays, but there are a lot of pauses and the player says
"buffering."
The player is most likely experiencing network congestion. This means
that there is not enough available bandwidth to stream the selected file. When
you are using a TCP connection, the data in the player's buffer is used to
supplement the stream until the buffer is used up. Once the buffered data is
gone, the player pauses, replenishes the buffer, and then resumes playing,
using the new buffer to supplement the playback stream bandwidth. This cycle
continues until network conditions improve. Try again when the network is less
congested, or select content that is authored for lower bandwidths.
Another option is to use UDP as your protocol by making sure that it is the
only protocol option in use. To set this option, click Options on the Tools
menu. This reduces buffering, but has the adverse effect of dropping data if
there is high congestion or insufficient bandwidth. If you are located behind a
firewall, you may not be able to use UDP as your protocol.
What can I do about video problems (such as if green or pink lines appear on
the video, the video is choppy, the Player stops responding when playing video,
and so on)?
Check for updates for your video card driver.
If that doesn't solve the problem, turn down (or turn off) video acceleration.
To do this in Windows Media Player 9 Series, go to the Options dialog box and
look for this option on the Performance tab.
Audio will play but video won't, or video will play but audio won't?
Make sure that your computer has a sound card to play the audio. If
you do have a sound card, the content that is being played probably uses a
compression codec that is not installed on your computer. To make sure that you
have all of the codecs that are currently supported, reinstall Windows Media
Player.
To do so, visit the following Microsoft© Web site:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/mediaplayer/download/default.asp.
This issue may also occur if there is not enough bandwidth to play both audio
and video. You may receive sound even though the video is not present because
audio requires less available bandwidth"
I cannot hear the audio on some clips, but on other clips I can.
This may involve many issues, very few of which can be corrected in
the player. To verify that the problem is not a player problem, follow these
steps:
1. Verify that you have the correct and up-to-date drivers for your sound card.
Using incorrect drivers or out-of-date drivers can cause unexpected behavior.
2. Some video adapters cannot play audio content that was created by using an 8
kilohertz (8-kHz) or 16-kHz sampling rate. To determine if this is the problem,
determine the sampling rate that is used in the ASF file:
In Windows Media Player, open the streaming media file with which you are
having difficulty.
On the File menu, click Properties.
Click the Advanced tab.
Look at the list of codecs in use to see if you can determine the sampling rate
for the audio. If it is 8-kHz or 16-kHz, this may be the problem.
I can hear audio, but it hisses, pops, sounds scratchy, or sometimes drops in
and out. "Verify that you are using the proper and most up-to-date drivers for
your sound card. NetShow Services uses standard Windows compression codecs to
compress and decompress the audio. Poorly implemented or incorrect sound card
drivers may cause problems with compressed audio. You may not know that you are
using bad or mismatched drivers because all of the system sounds that are
included with Windows are uncompressed audio files. You can typically play
these files correctly even with bad or mismatched drivers. This problem is not
unique to NetShow Services; virtually any multimedia program that uses Windows
sound codecs and compressed audio files is likely to exhibit similar behavior.
Some sound cards cannot play audio content that was created with either an
8-kHz or 16-kHz sampling rate. To determine if the sampling rate is the issue,
check the sampling rate that is used in the .asf file. In Windows Media Player,
open the ""problem"" streaming media file. On the File menu, click Properties.
The sampling rate is listed next to "Audio Codec" (for example, 44-kHz). If the
sampling rate is 8-kHz or 16-kHz, this rate may be the cause of the problem.
5 : Miscellaneous Issues

Why can’t I login to the website?
Check to see if there is an error message. “Login Failedâ€
means that an invalid username / password combination was used.
Personal Firewall
If you have a personal (software) firewall running such as Zone
Alarm or Norton Internet Security, it may prevent you from logging in properly.
These programs block session cookies by default. Check the documentation for
your particular software to update your settings.

6
: Flash Player
In order to view correctly our Animations, you need to run the last version of
the Macromedia Flash Player. Download it
right here

7
: Windows Media Player 
In order to view movies, you need the last version of Microsoft© Windows Player.
Download it here
.

8
: Macintosh Users 
To view our sites on Macintosh system, you need to run Internet Explorer 5.5.
However, the WindowsMedia player is not running on Mac OS.

9
: Nestcape and Mozzilla Browser 
Our sites are not optimized for those 2 browsers.
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