Slightly to my surprise I find myself burning CDs and DVDs in modest quantities again.
I noticed that the Taiyo Yuden media seem to be in short supply, with one firm saying its stocks are low, but also with a warning to avoid fakes. There is, perhaps obviously, a danger that that firm might also be supplying fakes, but at a high price - kind of a bluff! Is there a reliable/reputable supplier of this kind of media right now? Maybe even the one I've found. Are the Amazon sellers reliable?
If those discs are going to be phased out/no longer available, are there any other recommended discs for good quality, long term storage which will continue to be available - at least for a while?
This now seems like a minefield to me - I hadn't noticed this creeping up. Obsolescence coming along, as "everyone" shifts to non physical media - except that I do know people who want CDs and DVDs. In the latter case I discovered, after a while, that DVDs are a real pain, as for video a significant part of the process is the MPEG encoding. I could barely believe how time consuming that is, though as MPEG is an asymmetric codec - the encode takes longer than the decode, on reflection that's not so surprising.
Supplying video files in other forms, for example, on USB sticks, seems a lot easier - but not everyone can deal with those.
I noticed that the Taiyo Yuden media seem to be in short supply, with one firm saying its stocks are low, but also with a warning to avoid fakes. There is, perhaps obviously, a danger that that firm might also be supplying fakes, but at a high price - kind of a bluff! Is there a reliable/reputable supplier of this kind of media right now? Maybe even the one I've found. Are the Amazon sellers reliable?
If those discs are going to be phased out/no longer available, are there any other recommended discs for good quality, long term storage which will continue to be available - at least for a while?
This now seems like a minefield to me - I hadn't noticed this creeping up. Obsolescence coming along, as "everyone" shifts to non physical media - except that I do know people who want CDs and DVDs. In the latter case I discovered, after a while, that DVDs are a real pain, as for video a significant part of the process is the MPEG encoding. I could barely believe how time consuming that is, though as MPEG is an asymmetric codec - the encode takes longer than the decode, on reflection that's not so surprising.
Supplying video files in other forms, for example, on USB sticks, seems a lot easier - but not everyone can deal with those.
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