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Posted: 27 Apr 2008 2:06 pm
by Cal Sharp
Posted: 27 Apr 2008 3:16 pm
by Dickie Whitley
Well, I knew my "Senior" moments would eventually catch up with me. I sometimes don't remember what I had for lunch the day before much less something I did over three years ago.
Good find Cal, I had totally forgotten that.
I wonder what else I've forgotten?
Posted: 28 Apr 2008 11:48 am
by Gordy Hall
Bo Borland wrote:A little off topic here but has anyone tried one of the newer programs that prints your art & copy onto the disk itself?
My newest 'puter came with a 'lightscribe' burner, and it's okay...limited to two color, and the version I have takes longer to label the cd or dvd than it did to burn it! You also have to buy special discs.
but they look pretty good, and have had no known problems with the discs.
Gordy
Posted: 30 Apr 2008 6:02 am
by Wayne Carver
Isn't "Exact Audio Copy" suppose to copy bad cd's better than other software? It is freeware I think.
Unreadable?
Posted: 2 May 2008 7:50 am
by Dale Gray
If the disks are scratched some rental video's store can clean them up and make them useable. Dale.
Posted: 16 May 2008 8:35 am
by Ray Minich
It's weird that modern CD/DVD-RW drives totally fail on these old CD-R's.
I've held on to a number of older CD-RW drives just for that reason. I've got an HP-8300 and an HP 9100 drive I use for recovery/restore, and to burn music CD's at 4x and 8x. The new 52X drives just don't have the reliability.
Of course it helps to have a dozen PC's of different vintage set up in the lab to access old data.
Got any 360 kb floppies you need read? Bournoulli box anyone? Sorry, Edison cylinders are out.
I miss them first generation CD players that used a cassette. You had to insert the CD into the cassette/carrier box and then insert the carrier into the CD drive. More stuff to go wrong...
Posted: 25 May 2008 1:30 pm
by Mark White
I've used this program many times, works like a charm on old disks:
http://www.cdroller.com/