Depending upon how valuable and cherished those pictures are you may want to make two backup copies for paranoia's sake. However don't expect those discs to last a lifetime as such comments about discs are pure bulls**t, they can easily go bad without you ever using them so it's wise to keep those pictures on your hard disk too.
However as with any disc format you buy you need to find a good brand, but going by brand name alone isn't enough to not get crappy discs. Your best bet is to buy some Taiyo Yuden manufactured discs online.
Be leary of rock bottom supa-el-cheapo priced discs though. Stay the hell away from CMC ("Crappy Media Corporation") manufactured discs which you can typically tell if they are CMC's by the "Made in Taiwan" printing on the packaging. CMC manufactured discs are beyond horrible regardless of what they've been rebranded as such as; HP, Memorex, TDK, etc.
However as with any disc format you buy you need to find a good brand, but going by brand name alone isn't enough to not get crappy discs. Your best bet is to buy some Taiyo Yuden manufactured discs online.
Be leary of rock bottom supa-el-cheapo? priced discs though. Stay the hell away from CMC ("Crappy Media Corporation") manufactured discs which you can typically tell if they are CMC's by the "Made in Taiwan" printing on the packaging. CMC manufactured discs are beyond horrible regardless of what they've been rebranded as such as; HP, Memorex, TDK, etc.
Hi Andavari
The only brand I have used is "Verbatim" and never had a problem with them.
The only brand I have used is "Verbatim" and never had a problem with them.
Mitsubishi Chemical of Japan makes those. They've generally been good and reported as such, however some people have had slow loading issues with their DataLife Plus blue CD-R's including me which is why I haven't bought a pack of them in years. They're Verbatim DVDs are good.
Mitsubishi Chemical of Japan makes those. They've generally been good and reported as such, however some people have had slow loading issues with their DataLife Plus blue CD-R's including me which is why I haven't bought a pack of them in years. They're Verbatim DVDs are good.
Once again thanks Andavari , I've put Verbatim DVD's on my shopping list
Glenn said he sets his burner at the lowest speed., is that the normal thing to do with DVD's?
I use slowest speed as a precaution for archiving irreplaceable data. A hardware tech told me that slower burn is more reliable but that was years ago. On the other hand, it probably can't hurt to go slow.
For stuff I'm copying to give away, I use the speed for which the discs are rated.
I use slowest speed as a precaution for archiving irreplaceable data. A hardware tech told me that slower burn is more reliable but that was years ago. On the other hand, it probably can't hurt to go slow.
For stuff I'm copying to give away, I use the speed for which the discs are rated.
The best burning speed relies upon your drive and the media you use, unfortunately it's far easier to find and buy horrible quality crappy media versus what's known to be good and reliable. I was thankful I could get Sony media at many stores locally, although I had an entire bad batch of Sony CD-R's in the last year which has reduced my confidence in them severely.
Using crappy media like CMC (whom I wish would die out, or at least be properly labeled as CMC in big crappy colours and crappy lettering) typically means you have to use slower speeds like 8X with CD-R to reduce errors, not sure about DVD's though. However even at the 8X speed with CMC CD-R's serious errors can go un-noticed and may even pass so-called "verification" by CD burning applications. A good way to find out how error prone some media is I've always used the freeware Nero CD/DVD Speed.
The best burning speed relies upon your drive and the media you use, unfortunately it's far easier to find and buy horrible quality crappy media versus what's known to be good and reliable. I was thankful I could get Sony media at many stores locally, although I had an entire bad batch of Sony CD-R's in the last year which has reduced my confidence in them severely.
Using crappy media like CMC (whom I wish would die out, or at least be properly labeled as CMC in big crappy colours and crappy lettering) typically means you have to use slower speeds like 8X with CD-R to reduce errors, not sure about DVD's though. However even at the 8X speed with CMC CD-R's serious errors can go un-noticed and may even pass so-called "verification" by CD burning applications. A good way to find out how error prone some media is I've always used the freeware Nero CD/DVD Speed.
Thanks Andavari
I've got "Nero SmartStart" a full set of applications including: Nero CD-DVD Speed, Nero DriveSpeed, Nero InfoTool
I've tried that before and it was alright and all however that "will be rebuilt in .NET framework" has been promised for a long time now. ImgBurn for CD/DVD data burning, and Burrrn for audio CD burning which are both freeware is what I'm using.