Another question:
Let's say I want to back up data, and I want to use a CDR Disk. Can
I use a CDR Music Disk, because when I insert one of those, I get a
window with the following message:
You inserted a blank CD. Choose an action from the popup menu or
click ignore.
Actions Include:
At 01:46 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Let's say I want to back up data, and I want to use a CDR Disk. Can
I use a CDR Music Disk,
No.
All CDRs start out the same, what we call a data CDR. If you use a
blank CDR to make an audio CD (one that will play back like a regular
CD, not a
Hey, thanks. That's kind of what I thought. I assume a CDRW would
suffice for my purpose, however, once I select Burn, I can neither
add or delete any data from it, right?
Dean
On Aug 6, 2005, at 11:23 AM, Aaron Sherber wrote:
At 01:46 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Let's say I
At 02:29 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
I assume a CDRW would
suffice for my purpose, however, once I select Burn, I can neither
add or delete any data from it, right?
No, that's backwards.
CDRW (Re-Writeable) can be used just like a giant floppy. You can put
files on, and delete
Hmmm ... it seems to me that a few days ago, when I copied a folder
to a CDRW, that the only way I got it to accept the data and eject,
was to select the Burn function. I may not be remembering correctly.
I can always try another one.
Dean
On Aug 6, 2005, at 11:45 AM, Aaron Sherber wrote:
On 06 Aug 2005, at 2:45 PM, Aaron Sherber wrote:
CDRW (Re-Writeable) can be used just like a giant floppy. You can
put files on, and delete them, and rename them, etc. But you don't
burn anything to a CDRW
Yes you do. It's just that you can un-burn it afterwards.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL
On 6 Aug 2005 at 14:23, Aaron Sherber wrote:
At 01:46 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Let's say I want to back up data, and I want to use a CDR Disk.
Can I use a CDR Music Disk,
No.
All CDRs start out the same, what we call a data CDR. If you use a
blank CDR to make an audio
On 6 Aug 2005 at 14:45, Aaron Sherber wrote:
At 02:29 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
I assume a CDRW would
suffice for my purpose, however, once I select Burn, I can
neither add or delete any data from it, right?
No, that's backwards.
CDRW (Re-Writeable) can be used just
ok,
Thanks David
Dean
On Aug 6, 2005, at 12:11 PM, David W. Fenton wrote:
On 6 Aug 2005 at 14:23, Aaron Sherber wrote:
At 01:46 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Let's say I want to back up data, and I want to use a CDR Disk.
Can I use a CDR Music Disk,
No.
All CDRs start
On 06 Aug 2005, at 2:50 PM, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Hmmm ... it seems to me that a few days ago, when I copied a folder
to a CDRW, that the only way I got it to accept the data and eject,
was to select the Burn function.
That's correct.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
At 01:46 PM 08/06/2005, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Let's say I want to back up data, and I want to use a CDR Disk. Can
I use a CDR Music Disk,
No.
All CDRs start out the same, what we call a data CDR. If you use a
blank CDR to make an audio CD (one that will play back like a regular
CD,
Mein Gott ... did I actually get something right? This is a huge step.
Dean
On Aug 6, 2005, at 12:17 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
On 06 Aug 2005, at 2:50 PM, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Hmmm ... it seems to me that a few days ago, when I copied a
folder to a CDRW, that the only way I got
On 6 Aug 2005 at 11:29, Dean M. Estabrook wrote:
Hey, thanks. That's kind of what I thought. I assume a CDRW would
suffice for my purpose, however, once I select Burn, I can neither
add or delete any data from it, right?
Use CD-RW only when you know you need to write to the CD over
Dean M. Estabrook / 2005/08/06 / 01:46 PM wrote:
You inserted a blank CD. Choose an action from the popup menu or
click ignore.
Actions Include:
Open Folder
Open iTunes
Open disk utility
open another application
And there is a box to click for
Make this action the default
So, if that disk
At 03:17 PM 08/06/2005, Darcy James Argue wrote:
On 06 Aug 2005, at 2:45 PM, Aaron Sherber wrote:
CDRW (Re-Writeable) can be used just like a giant floppy. You can
put files on, and delete them, and rename them, etc. But you don't
burn anything to a CDRW
Yes you do. It's just that you can
At 03:11 PM 08/06/2005, David W. Fenton wrote:
This is not true. A music CD is simply a completely unformatted CD.
A data CD, on the other hand, has been formatted with a particular
file system.
There's a slight semantic issue here, but CDRs which are sold as
music CDR do have something which
At 03:20 PM 08/06/2005, Lee Actor wrote:
Almost. As you say, the distinguishing feature of Music CD-Rs is that
they contain a permanent piece of data on the non-recordable part of the
disk identifying them as music blanks, which allows them to be burned on
stand-alone consumer CD recorders
Ah,
On 06 Aug 2005, at 5:06 PM, A-NO-NE Music wrote:
Aaron Sherber / 2005/08/06 / 04:54 PM wrote:
Okay. I tend not to use the term burn for CD-RW, but maybe
that's just me.
You are correct. CDR laster does burn holes on the media, while
CDRW won't.
Fercrissakes, guys, that's *not* what
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