LIGHTNING UK! Posted January 14, 2017 Posted January 14, 2017 If they're saying it'll last 1000, I'm sure you could at least expect it to outlive you. So when you're 90, you'll be able to hunt down the last remaining optical drive in existence and pull up all of the ROMs from your mdisc backups.
gamercr7 Posted January 17, 2017 Author Posted January 17, 2017 When I run the ImgBurn installer Avira shows an alert and removes for quaratine the Adware / DealPly.dcjga, I downloaded the imgburn from the official site What does this mean for me to do?
Ch3vr0n Posted January 17, 2017 Posted January 17, 2017 What does that have to do with any burn errors. That is as far of topic distance worst as the earth is to the sun. That thing is just detecting the opencandy dll Sent from my Nexus 6P with Tapatalk.
LIGHTNING UK! Posted January 17, 2017 Posted January 17, 2017 That doesn't even look like an opencandy detection issue. Maybe you clicked an advert rather than going to the download page and picking from the seven listed mirror sites. As such, you may have ended up with just about anything. And why are you downloading it again when you already have it? Have you reformatted?
dbminter Posted January 18, 2017 Posted January 18, 2017 I was thinking the same thing when I saw this. Why was it posted here? And that I also didn't think it was opencandy, but had no idea what it was. I also think one of the download mirrors was missed and some kind of advert was selected. Or one of the mirrors is serving up something it shouldn't be.
gamercr7 Posted January 18, 2017 Author Posted January 18, 2017 i downloaded official website imgburn servidor imgburn
gamercr7 Posted January 23, 2017 Author Posted January 23, 2017 MDisc DVDR presents degradation jitter, PIE, PIF, POF every year? MDisc Is same DVDR organic dye?
dbminter Posted January 23, 2017 Posted January 23, 2017 Well, I don't know if the graph data will get worse as the years go on or just, one day, you find you can't read the disc at all. MDisc does not use DVD type organic dyes. BD-R uses metal oxide so it lasts longer. I don't know how MDisc works but the analogy is similar to using a laser to etch pits in stone.
Ch3vr0n Posted January 23, 2017 Posted January 23, 2017 You just don't give up do you. Every day new questions. How do uit expect us to predict YOUR results with Mdisc over years when Mdisc is very new? Try it and test for yourself then make your conclusions. No, we already told your a few times here. MDISC uses an inorganic carbon recording surface. Sent from my Nexus 6P with Tapatalk.
gamercr7 Posted January 28, 2017 Author Posted January 28, 2017 (edited) i have doubt long time, It is possible fungi to develop in the polycarbonate of cdr/dvdr/mdisc and eat the disc polycarbonate, dye, glue? I read on the internet a fungus called Geotrichum that attacks optical media Edited January 28, 2017 by gamercr7
dbminter Posted January 28, 2017 Posted January 28, 2017 I know there is something called layer/disc rot. It's apparently when, over time, the glue holding the readable layer to the physical disc rots and separates from the disc itself, rendering it unplayable. That could be caused by some kind of fungal infection, I suppose. Especially on DVD-R which uses organic dyes.
gamercr7 Posted January 28, 2017 Author Posted January 28, 2017 The fungus attacks and eats the polycarbonate or the glue or the dye or the 3?
Ch3vr0n Posted January 28, 2017 Posted January 28, 2017 Here we go again, instead of burn and dye composite questions we've now gone into fungus world. You read on the internet about the fungus, use those same internet search/reading skills to know what and how it does what it does. Sent from my Nexus 7 (2013) with Tapatalk
gamercr7 Posted January 28, 2017 Author Posted January 28, 2017 (edited) 1 for long-term archival of data and non-fungus in diusc polycarbonate is recommended CD-R, DVDR, MDisc DVDR, Blu-ray? Or do they all have the same resistance, structure, and same problems? 2 For storage of CDs, DVDs, MDiscs what is the best place to prevent fungal growth? Edited January 28, 2017 by gamercr7
Ch3vr0n Posted January 29, 2017 Posted January 29, 2017 1 of course they don't have the same consistency. One uses inorganic dye the other a carbon. You've been told that a dozen times now. 2. The same place as with any optical disc. Dark and dry place. Google it Sent from my Nexus 6P with Tapatalk.
gamercr7 Posted January 29, 2017 Author Posted January 29, 2017 1 I keep my dvdr verbatim and mdisc dvd inside black case of dvd, black is dark, the place where I keep them is only moist on rainy days, on these rainy days the fungus develop? 2 Does the dvdr mdisc suffer from any jitter, pie, pif degradation every year?
Ch3vr0n Posted January 29, 2017 Posted January 29, 2017 Here we go again. 1 & 2. Google it. Sent from my Nexus 6P with Tapatalk.
gamercr7 Posted January 30, 2017 Author Posted January 30, 2017 Dvdr mdisc jitter, pie, pif will degrade with the passing of the years?
Ch3vr0n Posted January 30, 2017 Posted January 30, 2017 You already know the answer, mdisc claims 1000y. Google it Sent from my Nexus 7 (2013) with Tapatalk
gamercr7 Posted January 30, 2017 Author Posted January 30, 2017 1000 years for good jitter, good pie, good pif
gamercr7 Posted February 7, 2017 Author Posted February 7, 2017 Indirect sunlight, led lamp light, fluorescent lamp light in these 3 cases the light degrades the polycarbonate plastic?
LIGHTNING UK! Posted February 7, 2017 Posted February 7, 2017 People have lost interest now. Please move on.
gamercr7 Posted February 19, 2017 Author Posted February 19, 2017 exist any problem of humidity if I store the cd / dvd / mdisc inside a dvd black case and dvd case inside a closed plastic bag? I keep the bag closed in a ventilated and open room
LIGHTNING UK! Posted February 19, 2017 Posted February 19, 2017 What you want is a white bag inside a black bag. Wrap the whole thing in tissue paper and package it in a cardboard box that you then completely seal with sellotape. Then wrap the box in tin foil.
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