Chapter 6. CD/DVD Drive Annoyances

Multimedia has really come of age. The slow, old CD-ROM drives that played music and muddled through new software installations have long since been replaced by high-speed CD-recordable and -rewritable drives (CD-R/RW). Today’s drives can burn family photo albums, record favorite tunes, and back up your system in a surprisingly short time. DVD drives have also found a permanent home in today’s computers. Not only can you enjoy feature-length Hollywood blockbusters on your desktop, but you can also create your own feature-length movies and archive massive amounts of data with the new generation of recordable and rewritable DVD drives.

Even as optical drives play a greater role on our desktops, everyday users face ongoing problems with hardware and burning/rewriting software compatibility and performance. This chapter starts with CD/DVD configuration annoyances, and then covers a series of performance issues. It also examines a wide range of playback, recording, and rewriting problems. Finally, you’ll see some of my favorite fixes for writing/rewriting and DVD playback software headaches.

CONFIGURATION ANNOYANCES

IDENTIFYING UNKNOWN DISCS

The Annoyance:

I inherit all kinds of unidentified blank media and it drives me crazy. For example, how do I know if I have an 8X CD-RW disc or a 16X CD-R disc?

The Fix:

Download and install Erik Deppe’s Nero InfoTool 2.21 (http://www.cdspeed2000.com). This powerful utility reveals an extensive array of information about ...

Get PC Hardware Annoyances now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.