PrinceGaz a ecri:
> From: "J. van de Griek" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> > If the burning device is of mediocre quality, or the media isn't all
that,
> > chances of burn errors or poorly readable result discs are higher.
> >
> > And that is probably what the originator of this thread meant. So, in
that
> > case, just try it out a couple of times, and if there's no problem,
there's
> > no problem!
>
> Indeed, that is exactly what I meant, does burning faster sort of produce
> less well defined discs, perhaps less discrimination between reflectivity
> of 1's and 0's, less sharp edges because the laser is having to turn on
and
> off from a higher power and the higher heat on the disc sort of blurs the
> bits slightly, or something...
Yes. Sort of.
See, the problem in this situation is that the actual problem itself can be
anywhere in either the burner, the media, the player, or in a combination of
any of them...
When the disc is burned at a higher speed, the burner needs a more powerful
laser to make sure the burn is sufficient, ensuring a good readable "one" or
"zero". Also, the media needs to be susceptible enough to be burnt that
fast, and finally the player needs to be sensitive enough to distinguish the
ones and zeros on the disc.
,xtG
.tsooJ
--
Joost van de Griek
Applications Developer
Yacht ICT
http://www.yachtgroup.com/
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