Question:
I burn many DVD's, should I switch to Blu-Ray Burners ?
♥Rubble♥Rop♥EIectric♥'s
2011-02-07 20:21:40 UTC
1. Will I notice an increase in GB/Min burning speed if I were to buy a Blu-Ray Burner Over my current DVD Burner I now use?

2. Blu-Ray 25GB Discs will save me 12-13 DVD-R Discs but will the cost of the 25 or even 50 GB Discs be the same as or more economical as current DVD Media prices?

3.. What I am doing is backing up a HUGE amount of Family pics and movide files since about 1991 and need to know if the $100 Blu-ray 25/50 GB Burner and the 25 GB(or 50GB Discs) I would need would be a really wise choice or should I stick with the DVD-R Era?

THANKS!
Four answers:
anonymous
2011-02-07 20:23:14 UTC
go with blu ray, the dvd era is going down :P, just look at the floppy it went down hill when the cds went public
anonymous
2016-11-30 05:14:23 UTC
i'm no longer acquainted with that distinctive variety of laptop. in spite of the undeniable fact that, all Optical rigidity bays are a general length and a SATA Cable is a general connection. I doubt it very lots that a rigidity does no longer extra healthful. you're able to desire to take the case to a community computing device shop to be sure this. I basically thought i could factor out which you do no longer neccessarily decide for Blu-ray to archive HD content fabric. you are able to gain this on commonplace DVD's as a protracted AVCHD spec. maximum (if no longer all) Blu-ray gamers (and PS3) will play those AVCHD discs whether they exceed the specification max. bitrate of 18Mbps on DVD. whether, you will probable locate that maximum content fabric coming by using your TiVo field is compressed extremely heavily, consequently won't exceed 18Mbps. you are able to verify this with MediaInfo. the only concern to evaluate is which you will basically be waiting to shop a million or 2 hours of HD content fabric in keeping with DVD while in comparison with lots extra on a Blu-ray Disc. in spite of the undeniable fact that, sparkling DVD's are appreciably extra inexpensive than sparkling Blu-ray Discs.
anonymous
2011-02-08 13:08:15 UTC
You should consider using archival DVDs. There is not much info on the longevity of blu-ray media and so I would not invest in that technology yet. Info on archival DVDs is below.



http://www.digital-scrapbooking-storage.com
Sasha Whitefur
2011-02-07 23:05:30 UTC
http://www.pricewatch.com/dvd_cd_drives/


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