Comments on: How to Choose Between CD-R and CD-RW Burners

8 Comments From eHow Members

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Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Stick the disk in the microwave for 5 seconds. It will totally destroy the data on it. There will be an electric arc show for the duration. This is harmless. This is how we destroyed CDs when I worked in the military.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 When burning CDs or DVDs it is always convenient to burn it as fast as possible. However, you will get a better quality burn if your burn it at a slower rate. I burn usually no faster then 8x's. Slower burning will also result in less coasters (bad burns). When you're burning them, it is best to let the computer complete the burn alone. When you multi-task, you're drawing on system recourses the computer needs to make a quality burn and this can result in bad burns. It may say it completed successfully, but it may be unreadable when you want to recover the data from them.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Is a back-up CD full - and you can't re-write it? To prevent anyone from finding it in the local dump and reading it, first PROTECT YOUR EYES by placing it inside a magazine and then bend the magazine in two. The CD should shatter.

There's probably a better way to do this and if so, I should very much like to know about it!

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 It might be more useful to consider just how much speed you need. If you burn CDs often, you'll probably want a newer drive. But if you would use it only once in a while, maybe an older one (possibly even used) would be better.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Almost always, when you create a CD using a burner, you should create a "disk image" on your hard drive first to avoid problems. Then, create a CD from your image. With the Adaptec software, click the File menu to do this.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Read all the documentation that comes with your CDR-W. There are some tricky settings that you may have to make to get all your Writing Formats to work correctly. I've had no troubles with Copying CD's, but have had trouble with Buffer-Underruns.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Most CD-R burners can write to CD-R's and CD-RW, providing you have the software that came with your CD burner.

Anonymous

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on 11/22/2005 Memorex has come out with 700 MB CD-R Discs, 80 minutes, and I believe other name brands have also introduced this format.

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