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Technology → Recordable optical media

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1. Twiggy said on June 17, 2013, 11:09:42 AM (-07:00)

Kyurem
2,098 posts

That's right, I still use DVD±RWs for my on-demand storage needs. Sometimes I can't use a flash drive because the target doesn't have any USB ports of all things (like an actual DVD player). Or, too expensive for current needs (getting 5 DVD-RWs totalling about 21 GB is way cheaper than a single 16 GB stick, apparently), and I don't need to shuffle the data too much. It's split across five discs, so there's that, but I guess discs are sometime just cheaper for now.

I actually discovered the joys of viewing photos on the big screen this way. (No TV or devices connected to them here can play from USB. I'm in my other house right now.)

Do you still use recordable optical disc? Why?

P.S. I almost got DVD-RAM, but I decided that I'll deal with more latency for compatibility reasons, and the ability to write an actual disc image

2. Shade said on June 17, 2013, 12:19:39 PM (-07:00)

Regigigas
884 posts

I typically store all my data on external drives or USB flash drives, but really important things also are burned onto a rewritable DVD. Can't have too many layers of protection for your most important data.

3. Cat333Pokémon said on June 17, 2013, 04:40:13 PM (-07:00)

Administrator
10,307 posts

CDs are great for having around in the car or quickly getting something on a TV with a DVD player (if you have a computer that doesn't take ten hours to encode it) without digging out a box.

Of course, they're also great for installation media. I always try to burn lots of discs because they're cheap and easy to use.

4. Twiggy said on June 18, 2013, 05:43:59 AM (-07:00)

Kyurem
2,098 posts

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cat333Pokémon View Post
CDs are great for having around in the car or quickly getting something on a TV with a DVD player (if you have a computer that doesn't take ten hours to encode it) without digging out a box.

Of course, they're also great for installation media. I always try to burn lots of discs because they're cheap and easy to use.
Sometimes I feel an itch to burn mix CDs of my own... but I don't have anything that could make use of the limited space CDs have. One album equivalent or so for the entire day? Hmm...

*wonders how bad the computer must be, seeing as MPEG-2 encoding and DVD burning is very cheap when it comes to computational power these days*

I should also get some DVD±Rs in case I need to reinstall operating systems here, too.

By the way, what brands of optical discs do you use? I'm more impartial to well-known Japanese brands, to be honest.

5. Cat333Pokémon said on June 18, 2013, 10:00:34 AM (-07:00)

Administrator
10,307 posts

I haven't burned video DVDs in a while. I just remember it taking forever on my old Core 2 Duo.

As for brands, I try to follow guides like this and avoid the lowest quality discs:
http://www.digitalfaq.com/reviews/dvd-media.htm

Likes 1 – Twiggy

6. Twiggy said on June 18, 2013, 10:20:48 AM (-07:00)

Kyurem
2,098 posts

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cat333Pokémon View Post
I haven't burned video DVDs in a while. I just remember it taking forever on my old Core 2 Duo.

As for brands, I try to follow guides like this and avoid the lowest quality discs:
http://www.digitalfaq.com/reviews/dvd-media.htm
Hmm...

Heh. It's a bit hard before you buy them, since you can't check for them at all.

And I also just discovered the fact that some Nero apps are now freeware. This'll be very handy.

7. BigN64 said on June 24, 2013, 12:38:26 PM (-07:00)

Charizard
109 posts

Not anymore. Now I just external hard drives and flash drives. I only use recordable optical discs if I want to burn home videos and watch them on TV.

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