Greg
You still have a file alloction table of some kind on a rewriteable of
drag and drop variety.  If you keep adding to a once only then then the
table will take up more room, although I think some ealry ones kept most
of it on the computer until you finished it, which meant you couldn't
read it on another computer.  I tend to use InCD for a quick scratch
disk, but for anything else I use a cdrw and rewrite the whole thing
each time.  Safer.
Andrew

-----Original Message-----
From: Greg Crawford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, 19 August 2004 9:49 PM
To: Andrew Prior; 'insights-l'
Subject: RE: A Computer Question: CD-R/RWs, DVDs, etc


Andrew,

Thanks for the pointers on CD burning. 

One question: Somewhere I got the idea that, when using a software
application
to write to the CD, a proportion of the CD's space is consumed for
"administrative" purposes each time you closed a session. Is this true
and if
so, wouldn't that make this method less space efficient than direct drag
and
drop?


Greg 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Andrew Prior
Sent: Thursday, 19 August 2004 7:42 PM
To: insights-l
Subject: RE: A Computer Question: CD-R/RWs, DVDs, etc

Greg et al,
We have had constant problems with clients and their CDs. It has been a
technology under development.
Andrew's rules of thumb are:
1. Don't install InCD, or if you must don't have it start with the
operating system. It causes constant hassles because people can't
remember how to get the things out, or are too impatient and don't wait
for it to mount or de-mount. I suspect it's buggy too.
2. Use rewriteables with normal CD burning software... you don't have
drag and drop, but it's dependable burning
3. Always test your CD in another drive before leaving.
4. Make sure XP's native CD burning is turned off... it interferes with
other stuff.
5. Always finishe the CD if you are taking it elsewhere, or if it is
important material or you may not be able to read it.
6. Don't buy cut price media. It WILL let you down.
7. The earlier the CD burner and the earlier the software, the more
important these rules are!
 
If you don't have something made in the last 18 months, buy a new
burner... they're cheap for CD's; they're really fast, and the day of
duds is over..  Even dual layer DVD's cost me under 200 to buy and we
don't attract any discount, being a software developer, not a volume
retailer.
 
FWIW,  if you are buying a dual layer DVD burner for more than $230.00,
or a CD burner for more than about $85 (from memory) you are being well
ripped off! You should easily do better than this for LG  or LiteOn.
Dual layer media (9 Gig rougly) was hard or impossible to get last time
I tried. Blue ray will be here in a year or two will be affordable for
us ordinary mortals in probably a year or so after that (27 Gigabytes
per "CD")
 
 
 
Andrew

-----Original Message-----
From: Greg Crawford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 18 August 2004 10:49 PM
To: insights-l
Subject: A Computer Question: CD-R/RWs, DVDs, etc



I am wondering whether our computer gurus can tell me if there is
currently a degree of chaos ruling in the field of CDs and DVDs. On my
old computer with a CD-RW/R drive, I used Easy CD Creator 4. It was
possible to either use the software to add files to the CD, (in which
case it could be read by all CD ROM drives), or use the UDF packet
writer to format the CD and use it like a floppy (but only those
computers with UDF readers could read it).

 

I bought a new computer last year with a CD-R/RW & DVD reader. It came
with Nero Express and InCD software. I also have Win XP Pro OS.
Formatting the CD-RWs using InCD results in them becoming unusable. The
only way to add or delete files is using the Nero Express application. I
have started to suspect the software is a dog, but ...

 

I am also having problems with a DVD player. It started to hang. While
waiting to get it fixed, someone loaned me theirs with the warning that
it too occasionally plays up. They were right!

 

AND a software company I know which recently released thousands of 3 CD
copies of their updated software has had great trouble with unreadable
CDs all around the world.

 

So I am trying to figure out if all these things are connected. Are
CD/DVDs falling over because of too many "standards" or are these things
just unconnected events?

 

Greg

 

 

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