The icon will change to a Burn symbol. Click OK to burn. After burning your first CD or DVD, insert it into another computer and open a file or two to verify that you have completed the process correctly. Nothing would be worse than losing your files, only to learn that you don't have a good backup either. Click to Do Nothing with it, instead of the other options it offers. Continue to select and add files from other locations on your hard drive.
If you only need the one copy, click Finish. Stay In Touch. With Information Technology Staff. I also blow my computers out with an air compressor every few months when the heatsinks start to gather dust. I always open the drives and blow out inside as best I can. I, also, have some pretty old drives that still work.
BTW: i did own about PSX games, and i had several backups of each, since they frequently got misplaced. Search In. Share More sharing options Followers 0. Recommended Posts.
Posted March 7, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options I am Reid Posted March 7, Probably alot more then what you would ever be able to burn.
Shadrack Posted March 7, L3thal Veteran Posted March 7, Posted March 7, edited. I usually have a well stablished burning routine: burn 4x , verify, and catalog. Maybe 25 minutes. Then burn, verify and catalog, and so on. No pauses inbetween.
I believe I use quality media. I think they are legitimate I buy them from Nierle. Is it any good? Thanks Albert. Burning at 4x maybe is not really necessary; if you use 16x discs usually 8xx is a better choice. To verify discs maybe you can use a DVD-ROM drive and not the burner, so the drive can have enough time to cool up before the next burning. It is better to use a different drive to verify because also the reading process generates heat. The Asus is a rebadged LiteOn.
Not only for the reasons my friend has stated above, but also these LiteOn drives are too good at reading sometimes. Thanks, guys. Great forum. This is more or less what my fast modern HDDs take to move such amount of data between them, and I believe that optical media is way slower than HDDs. Is writing a DVD faster than reading it? It terrifies me to think about not being able to acess my data in a bunch of years, so I went the conservative way and burn at 4x.
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