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newbie question about dvd-r/cd-r
Hello!
I have a newbie question about dvd-r's and cd-r's. I've noticed some computers are coming out with both a dvd-r and cd-r. Others only have a dvd-r. Is there an advantage of having both a dvd-r and a cd-r? Or is it a redundant feature? One last question, can anyone please explain this: dvd+r/+rw/-r/-rw/cd-rw drive Thank you. al |
#2
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Actually if it says only Dvd-r it means it only READS dvd's but will also
read Cd's too. If it says dvd+/- Rw then you cna rewrite dvd's, also you can rewrite cd's. The dvd drive labeled with dvd+r/+rw/-r/-rw/cd-rw, well let me explain there a few differing types of DVD media to write to out there, there are dvd-r, dvd+r, dvd-Ram, dvd+rw, dvd-rw. Not all drives can read all types of media. That drive described can read/write dvd+r/+rw/-r/-rw, also all dvd+/- Rw drives can rewrite both types of cds. |
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Chris Stolworthy wrote:
Actually if it says only Dvd-r it means it only READS dvd's but will also read Cd's too. Completely wrong. DVD-R is one of the standards for recording DVDs. DVD-ROM is read-only. -WD |
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"J.Clarke" wrote in message
d... On 2 Jan 2004 12:37:04 -0800 (harrypotter) wrote: I have a newbie question about dvd-r's and cd-r's. I've noticed some computers are coming out with both a dvd-r and cd-r. Others only have a dvd-r. A year ago a CD-RW was standard with a DVD-ROM optional. Today a combined drive is standard, with DVD writer optional. Is there an advantage of having both a dvd-r and a cd-r? Or is it a redundant feature? It's redundant for the most part--some folks like to use the CD drive for CDs to save wear and tear on the DVD drive--DVD writers, while they are very inexpensive compared to what they used to cost, still cost a bit more than CD writers, and they perceive a cost saving. Also, some CD writers write CDs faster than DVD writers unless that has changed recently. I don't think the read mode of any CD/DVD drive is going kill the drive in under 5 years. Loading your system up with redundant CD/DVD drives does risk spin-up power sags, which can cause bad sectors on your hard drives. |
#6
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"Eric Gisin" wrote in message ... "J.Clarke" wrote in message d... On 2 Jan 2004 12:37:04 -0800 (harrypotter) wrote: I have a newbie question about dvd-r's and cd-r's. I've noticed some computers are coming out with both a dvd-r and cd-r. Others only have a dvd-r. A year ago a CD-RW was standard with a DVD-ROM optional. Today a combined drive is standard, with DVD writer optional. Is there an advantage of having both a dvd-r and a cd-r? Or is it a redundant feature? It's redundant for the most part--some folks like to use the CD drive for CDs to save wear and tear on the DVD drive--DVD writers, while they are very inexpensive compared to what they used to cost, still cost a bit more than CD writers, and they perceive a cost saving. Also, some CD writers write CDs faster than DVD writers unless that has changed recently. I don't think the read mode of any CD/DVD drive is going kill the drive in under 5 years. Loading your system up with redundant CD/DVD drives does risk spin-up power sags, Mindless stuff when most systems dont even spin up the optical drives that dont have any media in them at boot time. which can cause bad sectors on your hard drives. One extra optical drive aint gunna do that. |
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On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 17:55:13 -0800, "Eric Gisin"
wrote: snip I don't think the read mode of any CD/DVD drive is going kill the drive in under 5 years. Then you haven't bothered to check the dead parts bins at many computer shops. Optical drives die all the time, or just read so poorly that they're not reliable... same thing. Loading your system up with redundant CD/DVD drives does risk spin-up power sags, which can cause bad sectors on your hard drives. Nonsense. If that happens the problem wasn't an optical drive, it was an inadquate power supply. I'm not so sure HDDs will even suffer bad sectors these days, generally it takes a HUGE voltage sage to be significant, not an amp or two. |
#8
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"J.Clarke" wrote in message d... On 2 Jan 2004 12:37:04 -0800 (harrypotter) wrote: snip There's also DVD-RAM which is designed to be used like a 4.7 gig diskette and works pretty much that way, but the downside is that DVD-RAM disks can't be read by anything but DVD-RAM drives. LG has a nice drive out right now for $128 that handles all formats. Thank you. al -- -- --John My LiteOn 165 dvd-rom drive can read dvd-ram discs. There are probably others which can do the same. I have the triple format LG 4040B which reads/writes to all formats and cd-r/rw also. -- Doug Ramage ***Watch Spam Trap*** |
#9
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"kony" wrote in message
... On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 17:55:13 -0800, "Eric Gisin" wrote: I don't think the read mode of any CD/DVD drive is going kill the drive in under 5 years. Then you haven't bothered to check the dead parts bins at many computer shops. Optical drives die all the time, or just read so poorly that they're not reliable... same thing. That doesn't mean they died because of excessive usage. The optics get dirty in dirty environments, not because of usage. Loading your system up with redundant CD/DVD drives does risk spin-up power sags, which can cause bad sectors on your hard drives. Nonsense. If that happens the problem wasn't an optical drive, it was an inadquate power supply. I'm not so sure HDDs will even suffer bad sectors these days, generally it takes a HUGE voltage sage to be significant, not an amp or two. Poor power and cabling is the leading cause of bad sectors. It is a major problem. This has been acknowledged in every storage forum. |
#10
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"Eric Gisin" wrote in message ... "kony" wrote in message ... On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 17:55:13 -0800, "Eric Gisin" wrote: I don't think the read mode of any CD/DVD drive is going kill the drive in under 5 years. Then you haven't bothered to check the dead parts bins at many computer shops. Optical drives die all the time, or just read so poorly that they're not reliable... same thing. That doesn't mean they died because of excessive usage. The optics get dirty in dirty environments, not because of usage. Loading your system up with redundant CD/DVD drives does risk spin-up power sags, which can cause bad sectors on your hard drives. Nonsense. If that happens the problem wasn't an optical drive, it was an inadquate power supply. I'm not so sure HDDs will even suffer bad sectors these days, generally it takes a HUGE voltage sage to be significant, not an amp or two. Poor power and cabling is the leading cause of bad sectors. It is a major problem. Pity that your silly claim about the startup of an extra optical drive at boot time aint. This has been acknowledged in every storage forum. Pity that your silly claim about the startup of an extra optical drive at boot time aint. |
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