Sorry that you & shel are having problems, I have no explaination for that. Works fine on my system though, been a long time since I've been blue screened, almost feel left out.:)

Feroze

Bob Blakely wrote:

Thank you for the pretty blue screen of death.

Regards,
Bob...
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"The art of taxation consists in so plucking the goose
as to obtain the largest possible amount of feathers
with the smallest possible amount of hissing."
- Jean-Baptiste Colbert,
  minister of finance to French King Louis XIV

From: "Feroze" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Not sure if it works, just got it today

Start quote " UPDATE: This link goes directly to an executable file to be downloaded (windows only), so your browser may giove you a security warning. Running this program does NOT install anything, it's the actual tool itself.

Long time readers will recall that the issue of CD-R longevity thrust itself upon me a while back when archives of my wife's music from 5 years ago turned out to have erased themselves.

To recap, there are three dyes used in CD-Rs. Cyanine, Azo, and Phthalocyanine. Phthalocyanine.is the longest lasting, Cyanine is the least. CD-Rs made with Cyanine can lose the data saved on them in just 2 years.

Finding out which dye is used on any given brand of CD-R can be tricky. I purchased some Maxell CD-Rpro, which on the label and on Maxell's website promise a 100 year lifespan. But, on opening the package, the disks look like they are Cyanine. Granted, color cannot always tell you what the disk is made with, since manufacturers often add their own coloration, but still, I was suspicious.

So, I discovered the tool at the end of this link. It reads the ATIP track pre-written onto blank CD-Rs that holds information the burner needs to work with a given disk and decodes it to tell you where the disk is from, who really made it, and most important, what dye is used on it. No surprise, the supposed 100 year Maxells are made with Cyanine dye. BIG surprise, the el cheapo COMP USA disks turned out to be using Phthalocyanine dye, the most stable and long lasting, as are the Philips I got at 50 disks for just $15 at Office Depot.

So, if you are concerned about longevity in CD-Rs, you just might want to grab this little tool. " End Quote


http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/CDRIdentifier.exe






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