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Choosing a DVD Writer for a lot of people is still very confusing. We tried
to find a decent comprehensive guide to DVD media, but failed. So by piecing
it all together, we thought we would start our review with a quick overview
of this confusing market.
Plus or Minus?
There are currently three competing re-writable DVD standards in use. Here
is a quick explaination.
DVD-RAM
DVD-RAM was the first re-writable DVD standard to be introduced. The disks
come is plastic caddies, much like very early CD-ROMs. This means that DVD-RAM
disks are completely incompatible with anything other than a DVD-RAM drive.
Media comes in either single sided (4.7 GB) or double sided (9.4 GB). DVD-RAM
media can be re-written 100 000 times, instead of the 1000 times that DVD-RW
and DVD+RW can be re-written. DVD-RAM also supports defect mangement, which
enables the drive to avoid writing on damaged parts of the disk. DVD-RAM is
ideal for hard drive backups, but not much use for anything else, and are effectivly
obselete.
DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW
DVD-R was created by Pioneer, and was the first writable DVD standard. This
was followed by DVD-RW, the rewritable version. DVD+R and DVD+RW were created
by Sony and HP. Just about every burner on the market at the moment supports
both standards, including those made by Pionner, Sony, and HP. Both disks hold
4.7 Gb, and cost exactly the same. With almost all burners supporting both standards,
the only question is which media to buy for your dual standard drive.
DVD-R vs DVD+R
Both standards have an equal chance of being compatible with your standalone
DVD player or DVD-ROM drive. They hold an identical amount of data, and cost
almost exactly the same money. There are no important differences between the
almost but not quite identical technologies used. There is nothing to differntiate
between the two, unless your DVD player favours one over the other.
DVD-RW vs DVD+RW
There are some differences between these two standards that could be important
to you. DVD-RW comes in 2x and 4x, but DVD+RW comes in 2.4x and 4x. DVD-RW does
not support randomly writing to the disk, but DVD+RW does. This means you can
drag and drop files onto a DVD+RW disk. DVD+RW also supports defect management,
allowing it to avoid scratched parts of the disk, just like DVD-RAM can. DVD-RW
does not support this. Both standards hold 4.7 Gb, just like the writable disks.
Both types can be re-written up to 1000 times. Since both types cost the same
amount, the DVD+RW format is the winner.
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