I'm looking to buy LightScribe discs and have a basic question wrt which is the better - more reliable - format to backup on?
I've always gone with TY DVD-R's for SD DVD backups and will stick to that but I'm interested in peoples opinion on the lightscibe discs from Verbatim... according to supermedia stores site:
DVD-R Media definition:
A write-once, recordable format. DVD-R drives can write DVD-R discs, which can be written only once, as opposed to a DVD-RW drive, which can write and rewrite to RW media. The authoring use drive (635nm laser) was introduced in 1998 by Pioneer, and the general use format (650nm laser) was authorized in 2000. DVD-R offers a write-once, read-many storage format akin to CD-R and is used to master DVD-Video and DVD-ROM discs.
DVD+R Media definition:
Short for DVD+Recordable, a recordable DVD format similar to CD-R. A DVD+R can only record data once and then the data becomes permanent on the disc. The disc can not be recorded onto a second time. DVD+R and DVD+RW formats are supported by Philips, Sony, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Ricoh, Yamaha and others.
My understanding is that DVD+R, or anything +R the user can modify the Book-Type (to DVD-ROM for compatibilty with older SAPs) and on a -R you can not. With the definition above it states -R is used to master DVD-Video and DVD-ROM discs. With so many SAPs now -R support shouldn't be an issue but the "used to master DVD..." reference makes me wonder is DVD+R inferior (I suspect not) but wanted to raise here.
I've always gone with TY DVD-R's for SD DVD backups and will stick to that but I'm interested in peoples opinion on the lightscibe discs from Verbatim... according to supermedia stores site:
DVD-R Media definition:
A write-once, recordable format. DVD-R drives can write DVD-R discs, which can be written only once, as opposed to a DVD-RW drive, which can write and rewrite to RW media. The authoring use drive (635nm laser) was introduced in 1998 by Pioneer, and the general use format (650nm laser) was authorized in 2000. DVD-R offers a write-once, read-many storage format akin to CD-R and is used to master DVD-Video and DVD-ROM discs.
DVD+R Media definition:
Short for DVD+Recordable, a recordable DVD format similar to CD-R. A DVD+R can only record data once and then the data becomes permanent on the disc. The disc can not be recorded onto a second time. DVD+R and DVD+RW formats are supported by Philips, Sony, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Ricoh, Yamaha and others.
My understanding is that DVD+R, or anything +R the user can modify the Book-Type (to DVD-ROM for compatibilty with older SAPs) and on a -R you can not. With the definition above it states -R is used to master DVD-Video and DVD-ROM discs. With so many SAPs now -R support shouldn't be an issue but the "used to master DVD..." reference makes me wonder is DVD+R inferior (I suspect not) but wanted to raise here.
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