On Fri, 2005-08-05 at 09:39 -0500, Aleksandar Milivojevic
wrote:> A bit off-topic. Not a question on how to get it working, but rather
question
> about an practical issue after you get it to work ;-)
> I got a DVD burner that supports DVD-RAM (in addition to standard
DVD+R/-R). I
> really liked "use it just like hard disk" properties of DVD-RAM,
and according
> to some sources I found, the media itself is more resistant to ageing than
> standard DVD+R/-R. Great for archiving my data. But the media seems to be
> quite expensive. I guess mostly because all the places I found were
selling it
> in most expensive option: as single disc in a nice (and useless) case.
Haven't
> found a single place that sells them on spindle. At the end, I ended up
buying
> a 3-pack, with each media in bulky movie-type case (what a waste of space).
> Does anybody know of any place that sells DVD-RAM media cheap (in bulk, on
> spindle)?
DVD-RAM was cheaper (both drive and media) back before DVD-RW and DVD+RW
caught on. But that hasn't been the case since about 18-24 months ago
when DVD-RW and DVD+RW media dropped under $5. Even if DVD-RAM was even
more popular, the media cost would never be as low, large because of its
design.
DVD-R(G) compatibility is ultimate and longevity is extremely good in
Disc-at-Once (DaO) mode. So if cost is a concern, then you want to use
DVD-R(G) with GPL cdrecord+DVDpatch (or free-for-non-commercial cdrecord
+ProDVD if that doesn't work) for your backups.
In general, avoid DVD-RW, DVD+RW and DVD+R for backups if you are
worried about longevity. Especially DVD-RW and DVD+RW (which _are_ MO-
based, despite marketing to the contrary) because of the error rates of
MO. DVD-RAM mitigates this with a write-after-verify.
--
Bryan J. Smith b.j.smith at ieee.org http://thebs413.blogspot.com
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