HW: Nova Drive Boot
Carl E. Anderson
cea20 at CUS.CAM.AC.UK
Thu Oct 26 10:22:24 EDT 1995
> I myself am a Software Engineer who has just recently spent time
> getting a Pinnacle Micro CD-Recorder working, so that my company
> can start shipping our software on CD. I have successfully burned
> UNIX and Windows CDs, as well as a one-off copy of Myst. ;^)
> I am using a UNIX system. I have already tried using a P90 PCI PC
> to burn CD-Rs with *no* success; I conclude that I will have to buy
> about $1500 worth of high-speed AV hard disk in order to do it
> without error. I have even purchased "Wave For Windows", which has
> a (non-file-size-limited) ability to adjust, modify, and "clean-up"
> a WAV file, once I have recorded an audio tape to hard disk.
> All to no avail... :-(
> If you want to make your own music CD (the most difficult of all
> CDs to burn), it may be easiest to do what the above guy did --
> make one for yourself, and subsidize your cost by selling a few
> copies. Any additional insights on this subject are appreciated.
Or find friends who work in multi-media orriented companies.
When my now quite effectively defunct band recorded our demo tape,
a couple of members worked in such a company and with some small effort
copied the DAT of the tape onto CDs (one for each band-member). It's
not difficult if you have access to a CD-R machine with the
appropriate software, but it's the software that's the trick.
Another thing to be aware of is the differing shelf-lives of
different types of CD-Rs. CD-Rs use a dye as the medium to encode
their data, and this dyes comes in two types which can be effectively
indentified by color. The most common dye is a greenish shade, and
unfortunately has the shortest life-span before the dye breaks down.
Keep it away from light and you might get five years out of it. It
_can_ degrade in as little as a year, but for all I know could go
much faster if left in direct sunlight ...
The other type of dye is a yellowish-gold color and is
_much_ more resistant to the effects of light and time--perhaps
lasting as much as a century or longer. Unfortunately, CD-Rs of
this type are much harder to find at this time.
Cheers,
Carl
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