Well, I just found out yesterday (yes, im slow) what the HD-Burn option in nero does. For those of you who dont know, it allows a cd or dvd burner to write 1.4gb of data onto a cd-r. Of course, the burner has to be compatible...and thats what my question is about.
Is it possible/is there/do you think there will ever be a firmware upgrade that will allow dvd burners (like the gsa-4040b) to burn high density cd-r's?
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 13 of 13
-
-Yar, matey!-
-
Supposedly it's just a firmware update from Sanyo. However, drive manufacturers have to license it and modify it for their drives. Not too many companies have gotten on the bandwagon yet since licensing = $$.
Nothing can stop me now, 'cause I don't care anymore. -
Well...someone should seriously create a firmware update that supports HD-burns for the lg gsa-4040b. 3rd party, whatever..
-Yar, matey!- -
My 8X Optorite DD401 has HD-Burn and it works really well. I've tried it a few times and haven't had any problems at all. But to be honest, I probably won't use it much considering that no other companies other than accesstek has adopted it. I could use it to back up my own data, but if my Optorite drive ever fails and I end up buuying another type of drive than the disks will be rendered useless. It's a shame that more vendors haven't adopted the technology because it works well.
-
It's a shame that more vendors haven't adopted the technology because it works well.-Yar, matey!-
-
Sony has something similar called DD-CD, but I haven't seen that adopted by other manufacturers, either.
It's too bad. It's a great go-between format. -
I think Sony's technology required you to buy special discs, sanyo's works on regular cds.
-
Sony requires a proprietary media?!
Actually, I didn't know that.
I should clarify: HD-Burn is a good go-between format. -
Yea, but I think the tradeoff was that it could be read by ANY regular cd-rom drive. -
I did do some research on this subject since back a couple years ago, DVD burners were expensive and this seemed to be a nice alternative.
I decided against it since:
1) The discs were proprietary to Sony and it seemed that only Sony was backing it.
2) The 1.3 gig discs were expensive. I think they ranged from $5 - $10 a pop. Regular CDRs had fallen below the $0.50 mark by the time I think.
3) It seemed that Sony used some sort of "protection" scheme on the discs for AV data. Not sure how well it worked but I didn't need the hassle of finding a way around it.
CDRinfo had an extensive article about it and you can still read about it.
All being said, I feel that Sanyo's solution is still a good one right now. I frequently do not want to use two CDRS or waste a full DVDR to burn certain files. To bad they want a licensing fee for it and thats probably why it hasn't gained popularity. -
Originally Posted by Kingnog
-
I'd use the HD-burn only because I need to transfer large files between computers, and my other 2 (laptop and other desktop) don't have dvd-drives...
-Yar, matey!-
Similar Threads
-
Software to Read Variable Density Optical Soundtrack
By jersy in forum AudioReplies: 8Last Post: 7th Sep 2011, 23:03 -
How Increase Density of Frames Displayed? Vegas 9
By solarblast in forum EditingReplies: 2Last Post: 14th Sep 2010, 11:37 -
Increase the density of keyframes
By Stasik0 in forum EditingReplies: 11Last Post: 6th Jul 2010, 07:15 -
Toshiba RD-XS35 producing a relatively high amount of bad/weird burns
By Bix in forum DVD & Blu-ray RecordersReplies: 14Last Post: 23rd Sep 2008, 11:25 -
Toshiba: first setop that burns high-def to red-laser DVD
By TheResonator in forum DVD & Blu-ray RecordersReplies: 3Last Post: 4th Oct 2007, 10:33