I smoothly burned the same ISO with Brasero to a DVD + RW, and the media was recognized immediately.On the other hand, the identification of the CD-RW is much slower (apart from the fact that the burn then fails) and this suggests that something else "occupies" the disc already, which is why Brasero does not find it and considers it unsupported. And let's go back to your hypotheses: either there is a perverse interaction between a Brasero component and the ASUS burner, or there is something else that interferes as soon as the media is inserted and before Brasero takes possession of it, which at this point does not manages to do. If there is any other test I can do (difficult, after all the ones you have done), I am always available. And thanks for your work!


Il 09/11/21 16:44, Thomas Schmitt ha scritto:
Do you have any idea what software might be doing this anomalous attempt,
which is to try to read the data CD as if it were audio?
Not yet. I normally don't use desktops but rather a window manager
and i hate the kind of perky automats which i see on Debian 10 XFCE when
i insert a medium or Brasero is done with writing a medium.
Actually i use that machine mainly headless via ssh from an older machine
which fits me like an old shoe.

When i managed to get rid of XFCE i will try whether Brasero alone is
able to spoil the drive. (I'd expect so, because the desktop's automats
have enough opportunity to grope the medium after a xorriso run, but
don't spoil the ASUS DVD burner.)



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