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#1 |
New Member
Mar 2008
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I am new to blu-ray and have some basic questions before I buy.
Is the advantage of blu-ray over other dvd platforms basically a question of storage capacity or are there other advantages? I want to store thousands of RAW format photos and some videos (not HD though) and want to limit the number of DVDs I have to burn and keep. Would blu-ray serve that purpose? I have seen that the LG GGW-H20L is one of the most reasonably priced internal PC burners. Any experiences with that and would it be a good buy? Thanks in advance for any help regarding these questions. |
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#2 |
Special Member
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I can't answer all your questions, but can say at least this:
In addition to getting higher storage capabilities (up to 50GB on one disc), there's also the added benefit of the protective coating, which makes the darned things pretty much scratch-proof under normal conditions. Check out YouTube for an example of what one person did to get theirs from finally not being able to play back. As far as specific models for your PC, well, that will be for some other members to answer, but there's more being put on the market every day, so I'm sure you'll find one that fits your needs. |
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#3 |
Special Member
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I can't give the most technical answer for you but I can tell you that a blu ray disc holds up to 25gb of info for a single layer which is five times that of a standard DVD. Obviously if you wanted to burn to disc you would have to buy a blu ray burner for your PC and I have no idea how many are out there if any or what the prices would be.
I could ramble on about thinking about buying a PS3 because it comes with a hard drive that you could load your pix and video on to and it plays blu ray as well as standard DVD and does a whole lot more. At the moment there is a 40gb PS3 currently on the market (but there have also been 60gb and 80gb and some of those could very well be in stores not purchased yet). I purchased a 60gb PS3 back in Dec. '06 and love it not only for the blu ray capabilitiy but because I can load pix (600+) on it as well as video (almost 2 hours) and I have only used up about 18gb of space - keep in mind I also have 1000+ songs loaded on to it as well. My $.02 |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#6 |
Power Member
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IMO it would be better to invest in an external harddrive. Maybe even 2 (just in case one will crash)
You can get a 500GB external drive already starting at $150 (for a good one). Get 2 of those and you should be set for quite some time. The advantage is easier access (then flipping through a dozen or more DVDs / BDs) and you can still edit your picture, videos and save them again or add material as well. Blu-ray media runs at about $25 for a 2 pack of single layer (25GB). |
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#7 |
Member
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I'll try to answer what I can. Basically, there are the details about capacity (50gb as has been stated for dual-layers), the coating that makes them very durable and as stated, MUCH harder to scratch. The 25-50GB of storage would certainly allow you to copy a thousand RAW pics (assuming they run around 10-14mb per shot) plus some videos.
As for specific burners, it just depends on what you are looking for. I would suggest making sure you get one of the newer drives with the new diodes if you can afford it, but that will also be more expensive. basically, just make sure you do your research on current tech and what you are buying...i know a few first-round adopters of the older bluray stand-alone players will prolly be upset when 2.0 comes out. as stated, buying a couple external HD enclosures would certainly be the cheapest "portable" option, but i understand why you are thinking in terms of physical discs. A hard drive can crash. you can spill something on one. lots of things make them a little less "trustworthy" and since you're looking at long-term archiving (i would presume) then a physical media disc is the best option. BluRay will certainly knock down the number of discs to worry about, but for now at least, it'll be more expensive. Just make sure if you do plan on long-term storage, keep the discs in a dark place away from a light source as this will inevitably make any optical disc have issues...BluRay won't be immune to such. |
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#8 |
Power Member
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I see people are talking about the "scratch resistant coating". I do not believe that the empty media BDs will have this coating! It's like buying empty cds or dvds, if you check the back and you see they're blue, green or whatever color... once the studios finishes manufacturing them the coat will be put on there, which give them the silver look. This is just to finalize the disc and also to make a bit more scratch resistant. A music cd that you buy at the store is much more resistant to scratches and liquids spilled on there and fingerprints than a cdr that you burnt your own music on...
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#9 |
Power Member
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Well I guess I was partially wrong:
"DURABIS 2 protects the disc surface against scratches and resists smudges from fingerprints, providing error-free Blu-ray Disc performance. Hard coating technology pioneered by TDK is part of the Blu-ray specification, but only TDK has DURABIS 2, the most advanced hard coating formulation for Blu-ray Disc media." Pretty interesting... |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Yes, but I keep reading posts from people who rent Blus from NetFlux that the discs are all scratched up. How can this be if they have a protective coating? Can the coating weaken over time or can it chip off?
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#11 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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It's not like diamond or anything. It will scratch if it's abused.
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#12 | |
Power Member
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See, most people do not appreciate the discs coming in from rental places enough to handle them carefully! Now if they would be theirs, bought with their own hard cash, I am sure they'd act a little different. But I think there will be a difference if you receive a DVD handled by 100 people before you, compared to a Blu-ray handled by 100 people as well... |
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#13 |
New Member
Mar 2008
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Thanks all for your advice.
Actually, I am backing up to external hard drives as well. What I wanted was to see if there is an alternative to the extra backup I do to dvd discs. Especially because I handle huge files such as RAW photos. |
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#14 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Backing up on an external HD is great. 1TB is sorta affordable now. You can build a RAID drive for that extra storage though a second copy, say on BDs, in another location would be a wise move. fuad |
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#15 | |
New Member
Mar 2008
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#16 | |
Expert Member
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I can attest, these disks are pretty darn hard to scratch. We threw them, we slid them on the hardhard floor (air hockey anyone?), used a screwdriver, and finally, rubbed them on the cement side walk. The sidewalk finally did them in. But I was amazing how much effort it took to ruin the disk. We did similar tests with a CD and the CD was totally scratched after 1 slide on our hardwood floor. We slid the BD many, many times with very little scatching. Anyway, it was alot of fun and the kids just loved doing it. We even documented it (on paper). |
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#17 | |
Moderator
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Then you mailed them back to Netflix ![]() |
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#18 |
Active Member
Jan 2008
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It's not only the only standard left... it's the only optical standard period large than a DVD. HD-DVD never had a burner on the market. The only other options you have are magnetic.. External HDs and tape.
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