|  | Posted by Stuart Miller on 12/13/06 20:27 
<robinjoan@verizon.net> wrote in message news:3290o2h631s6goi5hpb477d9o0f2ibnum1@4ax.com...
 >I am not burning anything to these 7 disks, I am using Roxio drag to
 > disc to put files and programs on the disks.  I do not finalize the
 > disks as they are rewritables.  I should be able to write to these
 > disks, and delete anything on them.  For some reason, I can not
 > "WRITE" to the disks. These disks were fine up until 4 days ago. I
 > have been writing to them for over a year.  When I get a new file or
 > program, I add that file or program to one of these disks.  Because
 > they are DVD disks, they hold an enormous amount of data.  I would
 > still like to add and delete to these disks. Something got into my
 > machine, which caused this problem.  I am trying to find out how to
 > rectify the situation, and make these disks writable.
 > Thank you for your help.
 > Bob K.
 >
 >
 In the future, I wou ld advise against using 'drag and drop'. This is a
 packet writing technology, which generally does not work very well. It takes
 a bunch of computer resources, and does a whole lot ( how's that for
 technical talk? ) or writing and rewriting just to add a little bit of
 additional data. I woud think that the 'index' areas of you dvd would wear
 out quite quickly.
 
 I have found it is much more efficient and reliable to set up the data to be
 backed up in one folder, then burn a dvd-rw start to finish. When you no
 longer need that backup, do a complete erase. For small amounts of data, use
 a cd-rw or flash drive
 
 DVD-RW was never intended to be a substitute for a hard drive, as they have
 a very limited lifespan.
 
 Stuart
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 >
 >
 >
 > On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 15:55:21 GMT, spam@uce.gov (Citizen Bob) wrote:
 >
 >>On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 10:00:59 -0500, Rick Merrill
 >><rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com> wrote:
 >>
 >>>> it is a DVD recorder for my computer, I am
 >>>> using these disks for backup, I have most of my files and programs
 >>>> backed up on 7 disks.  They are DVD+RW disks.
 >>
 >>>> don't understand what you mean by "video mode"
 >>
 >>That's a term for the DVD file structure: VIDEO_TS, VOBs, etc.
 >>
 >>You are using Data mode which is like a regular storage disk.
 >>
 >>>What OS are you running?
 >>
 >>If the OP burned a closed session, then it is not possible to add more
 >>content to the disc.
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