Rob wrote:
I have some folders with CD slip-sheets which I'm storing them in.
Keeps them in a much more compact state than normal jewel cases.
I've already scuffed one printer-driver CD, smack-dang out of the envelope
it came in, which unfortunately made it completely unreadable. Luckily,
Hi,
After lurking for a while, I felt I should contribute.
I use things called the selector 40. see the site at
http://www.discgear.com
for details. Two of them keep my permanent software. Stuff I use
regularly is kept in jewel cases on a kind of horizontal rack. I would use
more of the
LZW is used in TIFF as well as ZIP. Another good option is PNG.
At 21:35 31/01/2001 +, you wrote:
Hi everyone,If you are storing lots of images its worth using Photoshops
LZW compression,If you have Photoshop that is .It will save a fair bit
of space and wont degrade your hard won image
At 11:49 AM 29-11-00 -, you wrote:
Alan,
I recently purchased the Complete National Geographics 31 CDs
of all of their 110 years of magazines plus the set of 8 CDs of every
pull-out map that they have published. My Yamaha CD Reader/Writer has
a Hell of a job reading the Instalation
the other CDs read just fine. Both sets were brand new
unopened and not a visible scratch on the dodgy CD.
Chris.
- Original Message -
From: "Alan Tyson" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2000 9:16 AM
Subject: Re: filmscanners: cd storage
Hi,
I know one or two of the lists I read have had discussions about this subject. I would
like to know how the Kodak CD-R Ultima 80 is for storage? It says on the package that
it is silver and gold. What was the verdict on the best cd's for storage?
Thanks, Jules_C
Jules wrote:
I would like to know how the Kodak CD-R Ultima 80 is for storage?
Is that an 80min CDR as opposed to a normal 74min CDR? I wouldn't suggest
using anything other than 74min CDRs as a matter of course - they might
work on your CDR drive, and they might work on your current CDROM