INDEX  F.A.Q.  SEARCH  LATEST POSTS     Rules  Register  Profile  Private messages  Login


Search all forums or this forum: Advanced search
Will Nero 7.0 do a Multisession DVD

Forum Index -> Video -> Software Playing Printer-friendly version
Reply to topic
Author Message
scustalow
Member


Joined: 24 Jun 2004

Post Posted: Jun 16, 2006 09:20 Posts View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

Can anyone help me figure out how to do this if it can be done..

jtoolman2000
Member


Joined: 16 Apr 2003
Location: Maryland

Post Posted: Jun 16, 2006 09:39 Posts Comp View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

You don't do a multi session DVD. Not reccomended.
_________________
No DVD can withstand the power of DVDShrink along with AnyDVD!


Cornucopia
Patently Pending


Joined: 22 Oct 2001
Location: E-Cnt. IL, USA (AGAIN!)

Post Posted: Jun 16, 2006 10:22 Posts Comp View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

What do you want to do, where you think "multisession" is the answer?

Scott
_________________
"You don't know what you got, until you lose it".--John Lennon


scustalow
Member


Joined: 24 Jun 2004

Post Posted: Jun 16, 2006 12:06 Posts View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

I was wanting to write some data to a dvd then later add more data at a later time..

Cornucopia
Patently Pending


Joined: 22 Oct 2001
Location: E-Cnt. IL, USA (AGAIN!)

Post Posted: Jun 16, 2006 13:49 Posts Comp View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

Just to clarify: When you say "data", you're talking about PDF, TXT, EXE, DLL, ZIP, MP3, DBF, DOC, JPG, GIF, HTML etc files, on a ISO/UDF data disc to be read only on computers, right?

Standard Windows XP DLA (drive letter access) should allow you to drag-n-drop what you want onto a DVD­±R/W. This will end up being a multisession/packet-written disc with UDF 1.5(?) filesystem. Will work with XP machines only (or other machines that have extra UDFv1.5 driver installed, like those that use DVD-RAM).

If you're talking about DVD-Video material, NO. Don't do that.
You want to append some new material--Rip the contents of the disc to Harddrive, Demux, Reauthor (with new material added) & burn a new disc.

Scott
_________________
"You don't know what you got, until you lose it".--John Lennon


JNavas
Member


Joined: 11 May 2005
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

Post Posted: Oct 01, 2008 11:58 Posts Comp View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

Cornucopia wrote:
Standard Windows XP DLA (drive letter access) should allow you to drag-n-drop what you want onto a DVD­±R/W. This will end up being a multisession/packet-written disc with UDF 1.5(?) filesystem. Will work with XP machines only (or other machines that have extra UDFv1.5 driver installed, like those that use DVD-RAM).

Although Windows XP does have support for DVD-RAM, DLA (Drive Letter Access, drag-and-drop packet writing of DVD+-R/RW) is a commercial product that is not included with Windows XP.

Windows Vista does have support for drag-and-drop packet writing for DVD+-R/RW (using UDF file system).

John


JNavas
Member


Joined: 11 May 2005
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

Post Posted: Oct 01, 2008 12:16 Posts Comp View users profile Send private message Reply with quote

jtoolman2000 wrote:
You don't do a multi session DVD. Not reccomended.

Multisession was not part of the original DVD specification and thus is not as well supported as multisession CD-R/RW, but it can work, with the following caveats:
  • Certain DVD drives and standalone DVD players, particularly older ones, may not be able to read multisession DVD. Firmware update may halp.
  • Older operating systems may not be able to properly read multisession DVD directly, although it may be possible with a special driver.
So be sure to test reading multisession DVD before getting too committed.

An alternative to multisession is packet writing. Commercial software (e.g., DLA) is needed for packet writing of DVD-+R/RW on Windows XP and earlier. Windows Vista has packet writing built-in. The caveat with packet writing is that the UDF file system may have problems similar to multisession, so again be sure to test it first. A UDF driver may be needed on certain operating systems, and the version of UDF used can affect compatibility. The big advantage of packet writing over multisession is that the disc can be partially rewritten, instead of having to rewrite the entire disc.

Yet another alternative is DVD-RAM, designed from the beginning for efficient data storage. Windows XP has support for DVD-RAM. The big caveat is that DVD-RAM is only supported by certain drives and standalone players.

John


Reply to topic All times are GMT - 6 Hours
Forum Index -> Video -> Software Playing Page 1 of 1





You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



Jump to:  
Display:   
About   Advertise   Forum Archive   RSS Feeds   Statistics