Pioneer DVR-A05 Review 176
kila_m writes "
Over at DVD Writers
we have the world's first review of the
recently announced Pioneer DVR-A05 DVD writer. It supports
4 speed DVD-R writing, 2 speed DVD-RW, 16 speed CD-R and is
able to write to CD-RW disks at 8 speed. The review is based on a
pre-release unit and is fairly comprehensive.
" The review itself is one level deeper.
Why don't they ever clarify (Score:4, Insightful)
Who will be the first to announce a DVD recorder that is 56x *
* Oh, by the way, that's equivillant to 56x CD, added by our marketing department
Also, as DVDs are thinner than CDs, can they spin faster without breaking???
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:5, Informative)
-Kevin
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:1)
I thought the ratio was 4:1.
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:4, Informative)
Second the data is more densely packed on the disc, this contributes another factor of 3.
Total ~ 9 times faster.
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:1, Informative)
DVD speeds are relative to the standard speed of a movie DVD (1,108 kbps).
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:1)
CD 1x is the speed required to playback an audio CD. DVD 1x is probably something along similar lines. IIRC DVDs are nonimally encoded around 10Mbps which makes a DVD 1x roughly a CD 7.14x or so...
Of course I shooting from the hip here since I don't have any DVD specifications handy...
Tom
Can they? (Score:3, Informative)
For one thing, the complexity of the electronics they've got to jam in the drive goes up because they need hardware to interpret CD and DVD. Also, there are something like three different wavelengths to support with the laser (CD-R, CD-RW, and DVD) IIRC.
Technically, the drive will be capable of spinning both at the same speed, but it's the interpretation of the data that comes in that is the limiting factor in this case.
Re:Can they? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:3, Informative)
rtfa [dvdwriters.co.uk]
it explains right there:
DVD-R @ 4x, 5.54MB/s
CD-R @ 16x, 2.46MB/s
(40/16)*2.46=6.15, so CD-R @ 40x is 6.15MB/s
and (5.54/4)/(2.46/16)=9.00813 (so khuber's above statement is right)
#1 reason you can't copy a commercial DVD is that it's twice as big.
and I would LOVE 9GB disks...
Re:Why don't they ever clarify (Score:3, Informative)
DVDs that are not writable, like those they put movies on, are 9.4 GB in size, because they contain two 4.7 GB layers per disc. As yet, no one has had much luck creating a writer that can burn on two different layers, so we're limited to single layer discs for writing DVDs at home.
Double sided DVD-R media are available, so it's still possible to fit an entire move onto one disc, as long as you don't mind flipping it half-way through.
Out of all the movies on DVD I've purchased, Stargate for some reason is formatted on a 4.7 GB per side disc and requires that it be flipped half-way through the movie... weird...
Slot Loader? (Score:2, Interesting)
Nobody seems to make them. Does anyone know if there's a reason why?
Re:Slot Loader? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Slot Loader? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Slot Loader? (Score:1)
It scratched a lot of discs. On reading them. Lost a lot of original games from that.
I guess that would be a good reason to back them up though...
Hmm... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
I think that the first macs that came with DVD-R came with an OEM S-01
DVR A03 (Score:5, Informative)
And with DVD-R media at about 3,- EUR and DVD-RW at 6,- it also becomes a feasible alternative to CD-R/RW. The old DVR A03 also costs "only" 300,- EUR now. That's a price many people might be willing to pay, and when the DVR A05 hits the stores, I think prices will fall even more.
Re:DVR A03 (Score:1)
Re:DVR A03 (Score:2)
NOTE: I do not work for Meritline, but I have ordered DVD-R/RW media from them several times in the past and have always received prompt shipment of working media, generic brand or otherwise.
Looks Good (Score:5, Interesting)
"The package contains:
1 x Pioneer DVR-105 DVD Writer
1 x Manual (online) "
I'd have to say that it looks good, even the cons section had an awful lot of items solved by having a second read-only drive (which you usually have).
When on the subject I'd like to discuss a reliability issue. Burned CDs, and even more CDRWs, have a tendency to break after a while (don't expect a CDRW to hold data more than 1-2 years). Judging from the added complexity I doubt that burned DVDs are better. How does a burned DVD rate as a backup media? What is the error rate compared to your average tape?
Re:Looks Good (Score:1)
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
Re:Looks Good (Score:1)
(I know most people won't need it, but think of the beginners)
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
Punchline (Score:2)
How are you storing the cd's? (Score:4, Informative)
Heck, I've got audio cd-rs that I burned a few years back that are still fine, even though they've spent quite a bit of time in the car.
Re:Looks Good (Score:1, Redundant)
package contains
1 portable audio device.
543534986409564 songs (online).
(how does somebody contain something in a box that isn't really in the box but somewhere else?)
Reliability? (Score:2)
Re:Looks Good (Score:3, Informative)
I live in Minnesota, so we get 100 deg F heat in the summer, -30 F in the winter. I shove CDs 2-3 at a time into a single pocket in the visor holder, leave them on the seat, I park in the sun at home and at work and I have yet to have one quit on me.
I also buy the cheapest brand X generics I can find, so its not like I'm buying expensive archival quality media.
The only thing I do is burn them at 4x instead of 8x because they tend to skip more at 8x, but that's probably just a car/media/burner interaction problem.
Re:Looks Good (Score:4, Interesting)
Granted, nobody will no for sure until these things start failing. But since most of us reading this have already had CDR-drives for more than the 1-2 years you estimate, we know you're wrong.
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
Kodak is no longer in the CD-R market, having had its high quality gold-stabilized products pushed out by lesser quality product. However you can still get Mitsui product that uses the same chemistry. Disks using lower quality chemistries are very unlikely to last 200 years.
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
Disks using lower quality chemistries are very unlikely to last 200 years.
That's okay, since I doubt anyone other than technological archaeologists will own a CDROM drive in 200 years.
Anyone who has data they want to preserve will likely move it to another medium long before then. I know I'll consolidate my collection of archived material onto progressively higher-capacity formats as they become available.
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
So it's not impossible (indeed, some really cheap-assed media has been reported to lose data early too), tho it does look like poor data retention can be due to the burner itself being borderline-functional.
Re:Looks Good (Score:2)
Excuse me, I've had a CD-burner since the 2x models came out, and so far, some daily use (mp3 audio discs) had to be replaced, and some dropped CD-r Shattered, or had the top foil torn off. But not a Single of my archival discs has failed, in any way shape or form. In fact, the readability life on CD-R is anywhere from 50 years to 150 years. Negligence will destroy any archival media. Paper has to be kept dry, but not too dry, magnetic tape can't be exposed to the elements or strong magnetic fields, hard drives have the same limitations as magnetic tape, but also are very hard to salvage should there be a mechanical failure, and in some cases, the heads will actually destroy the data to the point where it is unretrievable. Flash media has a finite number of writes before it fails, and is essentially etched into glass, making it vulnerable to being shattered, although it is usually well packaged (at least compactflash, and flash memory HDs are reasonably well packaged.)
IF your archival DVDs are properly stored in DVD cases, and you NEVER Touch them, instead, buring a Second 'usage' copy then You will Not have any problems with the reliability of the media, unless your archival site is burned down in a fire. A safe deposit box should keep your data CD/DVDs reasonably safe, as the only flamable material in a safe is well protected against fire, and the walls of the safe are designed to prevent theft, as well as fire, flood, and earthquake, some are even designed to protect valuables as well as the could assuming nuclear blasts had occured nearby. (eg: underground vaults, since there isn't much that can be done for an above ground vault, in the event that a nuclear bomb were dropped in the surrounding population center)
If your CDs are wearing out in 2 years they aren't being treated like archival media. And for a person like you I'd reccomend investing in some carnuba wax, and protective top side labels. between the two you should be able to extend the average life of most CDs by another two years at least. (note: plastic is a protective label, paper is a writing label, and doesn't add signifigantly to scratch immunity on the topside. BTW, you might consider adding a UV protective coating to all your windows (you can find them on google, both clear, and tinted) if you're having problems with sunlight burning out the CD-r Tinted will work better, as it blocks more spectrum. Also, don't leave them sitting in your car, unless they're well shaded, and the car is well ventilated, because it can get hot enough to warp the plastic, even if the disc itself is in the shade, because of how hot a car can get.
All I want for Christmas is my DVD writer... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:All I want for Christmas is my DVD writer... (Score:5, Insightful)
Joe Schmoe doesnt want a DVD writer except for one reason only... to write DVD's that have the home movies on them. currently the incompatability between burned DVD's and stand alone DVD players is so bad that even the seasoned DVD creators are standing back and waiting.. (No i do not have a DVD burner at home, only at work.. and on linux
Until they can make it as fool-proof as SVCD or VCD's on your dvd player... (my first firewire card came with videowaveIII that allowed me to capture/edit/burn to SVCD without even thinking... which is good for the average windows user.)
DVD VIDEO creation is still difficult and iffy. and at $5.00 a pop for the cheapest DVD blank... Joe doesnt want to risk it not being playable in aunt nellies dvd player.
Re:All I want for Christmas is my DVD writer... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:All I want for Christmas is my DVD writer... (Score:1)
burn a video DVD. take that DVD-R to best buy and try it in every dvd player they have there...
I had a 40% failure rate.... that's right 40% 4 out of 10 players WILL NOT recognize or play the DVD I made. that ratio is way too large. and the funny part is I'ts not the $59.00 el-cheapo dvd players only but also the overpriced triple overscan with hyper color and laser definition as well as racing stripes and custom holographic paint to make the picture and audio sound better.
Yes I made the dvd correctly. yes it works on many dvd players... no it doesnt work in a PS2... which most people I know have as their only dvd player.
what you say would be nice if it was true... but real-world testing by myself says otherwise.
You're a year out of date (Score:1)
~30% of current set-top players don't work, but you can be sure that future models will, and the DVD format will be around for a long time. Most newer PC DVD-ROMs work as well.
And the media simply isn't expensive. Good blanks can be had for $0.70 in quantities of a hundred.
PS: "The PS2" is comes in many production variants: some play DVD-R; some don't.
Does look good. (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course everyone reading this probably uses them. I personaly never ever have.
Re:Does look good. (Score:1)
got any machines without a sound card? (Score:1)
use the front panel connector for the soudcard? (Score:1)
thought not
Re:use the front panel connector for the soudcard? (Score:1)
including all the ones in all of the 4 machines i own w/ sound cards, in fact only a handful of modern pc's compared to the overwhelming majority which if they have a cdrom drive ALL have the audio headphone jack on the front
of course being on
Re:use the front panel connector for the soudcard? (Score:2)
Front panel connector on a CDROM not a SOUNDCARD. Please read the parent posts before accusing me of some kind of hardware elitism.
Re:Does look good. (Score:2)
Of course everyone reading this probably uses them
I find them useful for troubleshooting audio CD playback issues. It doesn't happen very often, but I'm glad they're there when it does.
Also, my old work PC didn't have a soundcard, and it was nice to be able to listen to music anyway with the front-panel jack.
SCSI (Score:3, Interesting)
SCSI burners work better and tend to last longer, although the only metric I have are my Plextors who have lasted a few years now. This is versus HP IDE burners which have both failed.
So... Where's the SCSI version? Last time I checked, Plextor was the last reliable SCSI CD-RW drive vendor out there. Who/what/why would you recommend today? Are there any benefits to IDE burners (technically for the IDE interface, not just because they're newer and faster) over the SCSI counterparts?
Re:SCSI (Score:4, Insightful)
Benefits to IDE: Cheaper to buy, doesn't take up a spot on my SCSI chain (I've got devices that actually need U160 on there.)
My recommendation: buy a cheap IDE controller (last time I checked Promise made one for $30) and a nice IDE burner. You'll see it utilize
Re:SCSI (Score:3, Informative)
Re:SCSI (Score:5, Informative)
SCSI burners work better and tend to last longer, although the only metric I have are my Plextors who have lasted a few years now. This is versus HP IDE burners which have both failed.
That has nothing to do with scsi/ide... my IDE Plextor did not fail in 2 years too. But friends HP did.
Anyway.. we're all waiting for SATA. serial, cheap, faster, thinner cables,
Re:SCSI (Score:4, Informative)
Re:SCSI (Score:1)
Every system has its place but, for reliability, I'd of course prefer SCSI bus.
You wouldn't like to waste a DVD-R just because your Winmodem dials somewhere and it blocks CPU eh?
Re: (Score:1)
Burnproof (Score:2)
Needless to say, hundreds of buffer-empty conditions and the CD still wasn't a coaster.
I'm a former SCSI afficionado - I now have a pure IDE system. (I eventually will plug in my 6-disc SCSI changer that I got at a garage sale for $10, but other than that my system is now SCSI free.)
SCSI cabling is far more sensitive to problems/glitches than IDE, so often I would spend an hour trying to get my SCSI chain working after moving the system. Eventually something was going wrong in the SCSI bus that was randomly corrupting data that I couldn't track down. I bought an 80 gig Maxtor (Apparently they've shaped up a LOT in the past few years from all I've heard) and have only once looked back. (For some reason IDE drives suck for ripping CD audio.)
Re:SCSI (Score:3, Informative)
Then, recently my CDROM decided to flake out on me. This was my 4rd CDROM (not burner) to die on me in the last 5 years. I will never ever buy one of those cheap crap (HiVal, Asus, Mitsumi etc etc) CDROMs or burners again. I decided enough was enough, so I replaced my dead cdrom with a 40/12/48 burner from Sony (IDE) for like $90 at compusa (I know i could get it cheaper but i wanted it NOW) and its been flawless for me under Linux and Windows.
So I took out my 8x burner and I use the newer Sony for my CD reading and writing instead of having seperate readers and burners. I'll probably sell the scsi 8x and scsi card on ebay, they've been good to me.
siri
Re:SCSI (Score:3, Informative)
For one reason, companies are the primary users of SCSI and thier expensive counter-parts. They can afford it! This drive in SCSI would definately have a use here for my backing up servers. (And I could listen to CD's with the 1/8" Jack and Volume control when I am not using it for backups!(See previous post))
Re:SCSI (Score:2, Funny)
Why SCSI? (Score:2)
The answer is "no". SCSI may be slightly faster, but not enough to be worth the price difference. My cd-r ( a Philips) burned each iso of red hat 8 in about 3 minutes. A SCSI burner may have gotten that down to 2:45. But if that 15 seconds per cd is really that important, because you're burning so many of them, then you need a cd-duplicator, not a burner. IDE speed is so high that you spend more time setting up the burn then you actually spend burning it.
The only place SCSI is marginally useful is in RAID systems on your server, and even there it's only cost effective if you are running a system with thousands of users.
Re:Why SCSI? (Score:5, Informative)
No, you're not magically going to burn a sincle CD faster with a SCSI drive. But using speed as the only rationale is not looking at the whole picture. It's sort of like saying that the dual 600MHz Origin server is less worthwhile than my PC, because my PC crunches numbers faster and is cheaper.
If the extra $100 I pay for a SCSI drive means that I will enjoy never having to replace the drive; never having to deal with a software compatibility hassle; never having to deal with an interoperability hassle with another device in my loaded system; and never having less than the best performance that I expect from the equipment, then that's an extra fee that I will be happy to pay and not look back.
The choice is up to the individual, but all these people bemoaning those who have preferred, and still prefer, SCSI drives is sort of ridiculous. Isn't a diverse marketplace supposed to be a good thing?
Re:Why SCSI? (Score:2)
As for price, last I checked the price per GB of SCSI drives was 4-5x that of IDE. That's not including the cost of a SCSI controller. No power user who isn't either sunning a server or a flaming elitist (hint) would use SCSI on the desktop.
One last thing, what is this "never having to deal with a software compatibility hassle; never having to deal with an interoperability hassle with another device in my loaded system; and never having less than the best performance that I expect from the equipment"? I've never had any such hassles with IDE.
Re:Why SCSI? (Score:2)
You are very lucky then ... IDE is a mess to support, especially at the OS level. I can imagine MS would be pretty happy if IDE disappeared too, but its so cheap (because of mass production and lower production standards and lower margins) that its hard to marginalize.
If you don't believe the IDE spec is a mess, talk to anyone on the working committee.
Re:Why SCSI? DUDE AND YOU FORGOT (Score:2)
SCSI is dying... (Score:3, Troll)
In fact I'm surprised why there are no ATA 10k+ RPM drives today. Personally I think there's a marked collusion, as in "if one starts making it we'll all have to start making it and that would really kill the profitable SCSI marked by bringing prices down to ATAish levels, and that would be bad for all of us."
I even see SATA proclaimed to be to the harddisks what the switch is over the hub. Individual bandwidth instead of shared bandwidth.
If there is a quality and reliability difference, it has nothing to do with SCSI vs. IDE, but only with the quality expectations and price premium of SCSI.
Kjella
Re:SCSI is dying... (Score:3, Insightful)
I would say that the analogy is more likely (Switch == SCSI) && (ATA == Hub).
And why are you surprised that there are no 10k+ RPM disks for ATA? Because of two things;
1) With IDE, rotational latency isn't really that big of a deal because the congestion is at the bus level. IDE disks don't have any intelligence built in to speak of, which is why they're cheaper than SCSI. So all the rotational speed in the world won't do any difference.
2) Why spend money developing faster IDE disks when it's far too difficult to retain compatibility and keeping production costs low..? Because it isn't worth it. It's money in the wishing well.
" Yeah, I know, it's flamebait, but I feel it's true. SCSI had a time and place where it looked superior. But now, CPU usage for hdds is negligible, 150mbit/s transfer rates *pr* disk with SATA is on par with SCSI and ATA RAID is everywhere."
Yes, it is flamebait. It is also a fallacy. 150mbit/s is something that SCSI did 10 years ago. Today it does 20 times that! Or were you suggesting 150MB/s? In which case that is also untrue. You do not get that kind of transfer speed out of an IDE bus. That is a theoretical maximum. Let alone "*pr*[sic]" disk. SATA being on par with SCSI is something that remains to be seen, so you can't make that claim either. Please show me the benchmark which has SATA beat Ultra320 SCSI, or even Ultra160 SCSI. If you can't produce that, please refrain from making comments like that.
CPU usage is also not negligible. If you have to compensate with 2GHz+ CPUs to use IDE, the point is moot. Why pay $1,000 for a computer so that you can use IDE, when you can pay ten times less that to get your WORKING computer to use faster disks?
You didn't get it, did you... (Score:2)
Oh, and you better read up on that part about ATA having no intelligence, you'd better read up on SerialATA. Re-ordering, no polling, fixed DMA engine problems, pretty much all it needs for being alone on the channel. No need for all that fancy bus locking/ordering features SCSI has.
Kjella
Oh and I forgot hotswapping and some more... (Score:2)
Kjella
Re:SCSI is dying... (Score:2)
As another SCSI supporter, I have to point out that IDE stands for 'integrated drive electronics' -- moving the controller intelligence onto the drive and off the controller. SCSI traditionally puts most of the intelligence on the controller, not the drive. These comparisons aren't as true as they used to be; IDE puts a lot of workload on the OS compared to SCSI though.
If you want an entertaining read, look up some of the Linux kernel development logs w.r.t. IDE development. It seems actually supporting the various IDE firmware versions is nearly impossible without proprietary information for each drive + controller.
You do not get that kind of transfer speed out of an IDE bus.Keep in mind that some drive manufacturers (like IBM) are putting 8MB or more cache right on their drives so that the user sees the speed of offloading the data from the system RAM to the drive RAM (or vice-versa) and not the actual time to write / read the disk. This doesn't help in uncacheable situations, and increases the electronics on the drive (making for a less K.I.S.S.'d solution), but does make those speeds 'possible'
I'd be interested in seeing a Crusoe-based machine with all SCSI & IEEE1394 components to save CPU cycles. I bet the effective speed would be even closer to P-IV's at that point. Heck, I think a Crusoe-based SCSI controller would be a neat deal too.
Moving on to another poster, however ...
Being theoretical makes your last statement silly; I want 'real' performance. That, I get with 1500RPM SCSI drives on an ICP-Vortex Ultra-160 RAID controller (which comes with up to 3 SCSI channels). Ultra-320 is out now too, at 320MB/sec, and the way SCSI communicates with its drives makes sharing that bandwidth per cable more efficient than IDE's master-slave system.
Re:SCSI (Score:3, Informative)
My Plextor IDE's been working fine for 18 months. Don't see any reason why I should spend the extra cash on SCSI - cpu load is negligable, I have no problems with multitasking & burning.
Personally, I can think of very few situations where it's worth shelling out the extra cash for SCSI these days.
Re:SCSI (Score:1)
Re:SCSI (Score:2)
Not quite. I just bought a Dell server (2500 series) and had to return it because of a lack of a standard IDE controller. Dell had this little proprietary cable that ran the CD and floppy, and there were no other connectors on the MB. I could have bought an IDE controller for about $40, but dammit, when I buy a $2000 server and it doesn't come with an IDE controller, I want my money back.
We switched to IBM for now. They do have IDE controllers on-board.
Re:SCSI (Score:2)
I think I'll look at Dells again
Re:SCSI (Score:2)
Wow... what a leading question.
Of course not - it's a given that the IDE interface is technically inferior to SCSI. That's not debatable. Ok, some people have said "yeah, it doesn't use an ID on my SCSI chain", but that's a pretty far stretch. I suppose you could point out that an IDE drive won't ever slow the SCSI bus down, which can be detrimental, but a separate bus/card fixes that just as easily.
The real question is: "Are there any benefits to SCSI burners over the IDE counterparts?"
And the answer to that is "no".
IDE burners don't make coasters anymore. The various write controller techs prevent buffer underflows in all but the most contrived situations. Drive failure rate is low as well - come on folks, you really think they're using different components for the SCSI and IDE units? All it is is a different controller board. Everything else is the same. If you want Plextor, buy them - they make IDE drives as well.
Of course, the IDE drives are roughly 1/4 - 1/2 the price of the SCSI drives (Plextors and Yamaha are an exception, with the SCSI drives only $20-50 more usually, but that's because their IDE drives are 2-3x the cost of everyone else already). They're also faster, and the newest techs are available on IDE first now (which didn't used to be the case).
If you have a server that needs burning capability, go ahead and look into a SCSI drive. Being able to disable IDE entirely means you have to deal with fewer buses in the same box, and simplicity is king. But otherwise you're just paying out the nose for SCSI for no good reason. Except maybe bragging about your all SCSI system to your friends who are too clueless to know how much money you wasted.
Re:SCSI (Score:2, Interesting)
Real hardware zealots appreciate SCSI stuff in a machine. Steven peddles "Dell Dude's approved Hi Val Lite On Combo Re-Writer" but the reality of the situation is grim.
My first epiphany with regards to SCSI being superior came form this "old POS" 486 server I found lying around somewhere. But it was a SCSI system. Not that I condone dumpster diving, but when these new fangled Packard Bell pieces of crap with their feeble Pentium 90 with FDIV [PENTIUM - Produces Erroneous Numbers Through Incorrect Understanding of Math] error and cheesy IDE hard disks, looking around for real alternatives isn't a bad idea.. Needless to say the SCSI 486 box lived far beyond its intended day of deprecation.
What IDE comes down to is its Intel backed. Not that Intel is a bad thing for the industry in terms of volume, they bring cheap and fast to the masses, nor are they bad to keep things competitive. But they sell CPUs and endorse IDE/EIDE/ATA/ATAPI and USB/1/2. That means SCSI and Firewire is better.
SCSI - first to implement SMART. This stuff has worked for me first hand. SCSI uses sector sparing which remaps defects to spare sectors, not marks them as "bad." ATAPI is a subset of the total commands available to the SCSI, and SCSI being the superset it has more commands available to it to perform various extra things. IDE drives have primitive understanding of tagged commands, if at all. If you have to write, Say, ABCD to the disk - but the placement on the physical platter was ACDB. SCSI would write them out as ACBD, to say the disk from having to do extra work. IDE class would start at A, then pass up the C locations to write the B, then rewind to the C location, then forward to the D location. Grossly inefficient. SCSI drives have superior warranties. SCSI drive vendors will advance replace hard drives, not requiring you to rip out your drive and send it off as IDE vendors do. SCSI vendors make money on SCSI drives - this is a good thing because that means they actually support he product. SCSI implementations on UNIX are clean, and most IDE "SCSI-like" devices are emulated as SCSI for a reason. If you think SCSI is a myth, try this one on. Novell 4 provided an IDE driver so that people could use IDE CD-ROM. They specifically asked that IDE drives not be used to serve Novell shares, the devices generally could not handle the extremely aggressive (and pleasantly fast and recoverable) Novell file system. Low and behold, my cheesy boss thought to put an IDE disk in there. It seized up a year later. Literally. The drive wouldn't even spin up. Luckily I noticed this condition and was able to copy the info off (we had backups but hey, up to the minute is better). After power off and power on, drive, dead. This drive was not one of those drives prone to failure, like the 75GXP or a 6GB WD. It died a horrible death due to inferior capability.
I like my Adaptec and LSI/Symbios high end SCSI cards. I like low CPU usage. I like a proactive approach to error detection and correction - sector sparing and SMART. I like calling and getting support.
Notable - the price for 80 pin SCA equipment is in expensive. If you need cheap SCSI disks this is the way to go, there seems to be overstock of said drives and places like Hypermicro [hypermicro.com] will give you a converter from 80 to 68 pin (LVD safe) for free with 80 pin purchase.
Also, just recently, be cognizant of the fact that FireWire creamed USB 2.0 despite the higher bandwidth maximums. [xbitlabs.com] Intel sell CPUs. Eating more and more CPU power created a need for bigger better faster more.
Now a drawback with SCSI is the idiotic cabling, high cost. The answer to idiotic cabling was SCA a SAF-TE enclosure. Hot swappable and all. Clearly with SCSI-over-IP coming, and 10GE with SCSI-over-IP being a planned alternative to FC, there is something alluring about SCSI to keep it going on in the 10 GE era.
I would like to see a firewire-like connector adaptation of SCSI at some point. I like SCSI. The driver support is universal for AIC78xx and NCR/Symbios/LSI 53C8xx/53C7xx. The performance is superior and handles very busy multi user stuff far more gracefully. Better warranties. Better data reliability. Interestingly cheap backchannel for 80 pin SCA.
For DVD-ROMS, I would like to see SCSI and firewire come out first, the crud adaptations to USB and ATAPI come out later.
I am repulsed by ATAPI add in cards, btw. I don't like Promise too much, I don't like HPT at all. I think 3Ware is a nice idea but it's a hack and it makes not sense to do anything but mirror an IDE to me.
Do I have a 120 MB 8MB buffer hard drive? Yes. Do I wish it was a SCSI yes. Would I buy another CDR burner when I have a Plextor SCSI 12X? No, not until another SCSI one comes out. I already have the SCSI subsystem in place so the incremental cost in getting a SCSI drive is worth it.
So in summation, I am supporting "alsta's argument and desire for SCSI versions of hardware. I also makes it easy to stuff new things into SCSI only platforms like some Sun Ultra workstations. And interestingly enough, lots of former Mac zealots and I agree, Apple jumped the shark hard when they bailed on SCSI. For anti SCSI zealots I will condone only Firewire. And then maybe USB for junk like keyboards and mice. I wish that machines were all build with the SCA or FC backplane that the Sun workstations get. Its elegant, reliable, easy to service, hot swappable and guess what, if you care about what's on your hard drive no price seems to high to guarantee better data availability.
High-Quality! Inexpensive! Superior-Performance! - pick any two.
Re:SCSI (Score:2)
I've always tried to source SCSI CD-ROMs and CD Burners because they end up being more reliable by being less CPU dependant; this is a good thing, and I hope Plextor keeps making them.
Re:SCSI (Score:2)
Not interested (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not interested (Score:1)
Re:Not interested (Score:3, Interesting)
DVD being only 7X more capacity of CDR is a disappointment. Add to the fact that the drives are only barely in the affordable range, AND that we don't have a single standard.
If we were talking blue disc right now,(38X more capacity of CDR) that would be something different!
There are articles available that show that the DVD recording technology has been purposely delayed to milk out the last $$$$ out of the CDR market.
The question is.... (Score:1)
Is this a sun-$200 unit, or do I have to wait years for that to occur?
This review was post by Hemos since (Score:3, Funny)
Hemos looks this further, laughing out loud you slashdot people laughing him about moronic posting of some review. At least he wants us to believe that until now.
Questions (Score:1)
For a long time I misconsidered buying a DVD burner as there were many different formats, technologies and also media prices issues involved.
Now, if I burn a DVD on this stuff, will it still be readable on another PC's lambda DVD player ?
Is there something specific to know about this ?
What about region-locking ?
Can I easily duplicate my own DVD (and DeCSS these on the fly, BTW caus' I want my backups not to suffer from such idiot protection scheme) ?
Thanks
Reasonable CDR speed. (Score:4, Interesting)
There will be exceptions, if you need (or think you need) superfast burning. but this is welcome news.
Re:Reasonable CDR speed. (Score:1)
Would aslo replace my 8x Creative DVD-ROM.
Other uses for 19.2megabits per second (Score:1, Interesting)
Consumer DVD-R is here, but not ready for 4x (Score:5, Informative)
Thus, there is no real standard for "generic" 2x discs; those that claim to be are either re-labeled (and expensive) or (speculation) have "fake" identifiers -- the quality and compatability varies greatly, but suffice to say, most are quite poor.
Though, I did say that consumer DVD-R is here: Princo ($0.66 [qtccdr.com]) and Ritek ($1.00 [rima.com]) both make fine (and cheap) 1x discs which can be burned at 2x using a "hacked [doom9.org]" firmware. My experience [doom9.org] suggests that Princo 1x media are good for 2x, although set-top compatability seems to suffer. Many have reported good luck with Riteks, although I've had poor luck with discs over 4.00 GB (full capacity is 4.38 GB).
mod parent up (Score:2)
4x standard was approved by DVD-R consortium (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 21, @01:12PM (#4496830)
Thus this practice you mention is now in the past. The Pioneer doesn't need to special case media anymore to support 2X and 4X.
Some times your purpose in life... (Score:5, Informative)
Don't get sucked in by a low priced HP DVD i100 burner. I picked one up to create ghost images for our SE's demo laptops. With the latest bios, drivers, etc - I've found two DVD-ROM's that will actually read a burned CD. Unfortunately, that does not include any of the IBM think pads, Dell latitudes, or any other Dell workstation in our shop.
For $99, HP will 'update' the drive to make it work with DVD-R's. That is another stinky issue since they advertised it worked with the -R media, but I'm OK with DVD-RW media if it actually was readable by anything I picked it up for. The box said it ran under Win2K server - it does, but only as a DVD-ROM. The burning software only 'works' with Win2K workstation and below. Customer Service was less than helpful.
Rather than spend the $99 and hope - We picked up a Pioneer unit (not the one in this review, but don't remember the number) and have had no problems. Fool me once...
Re:Some times your purpose in life... (Score:1)
mczak
How about it? (Score:1, Interesting)
This article mentioned that even some versions of the PS2 had differences. I despise this sort of thing. I have a feeling that with the right sort of hardware, most of these problems could be fixed in firmware. Some company needs to put out a drive that has the hardware to do everything, release the specs, and watch as the firmware to read/write all standards roll in.
As an aside, how and CD-R[W] and DVD[+/-]R[W/AM/OM] accomplished in Linux? Would it be by creating a file of the proper size, hooking a loopback device up to it, and treating it as the proper file system, then writing that to the disk? What if I don't have a partition on my disk big enough to handle the temp file?
Where are media standards going? (Score:2)
This has been debated between friends of mine and we can't get a clear signal as to what might win out. With many drive prices still over $300 its kind of tough to commit to a standard that won't benefit from continuously declining media prices and market acceptance, particularly when it comes to digital media (set-top DVD).
Just got the Sony... (Score:4, Informative)
It's a great drive. Does DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, and CD-R/RW. No more worrying about DVD standards. So far I've only got to test it at 1x since that's the media I have, but it worked just fine.
My only complaint is the the front of the tray is Sony silver, while the rest of the drive is white. Might look OK in an aluminum case, though.
Mount Rainer (Score:1, Insightful)
incase the inevitable occurs (Score:2, Informative)
Pros
Supports writing 99min CDs
4 Speed DVD-R Support
2 Speed DVD-RW Support
Supports DAO-RAW mode
Higher DVD read speeds for DVD-ROM & HS media
Lower access times
Can read and write 96 bytes sub-channels
Fast & perfect audio ripping
Can produce X-Box & Playstation compatible disks
Can read & write CD-Text
DVD "-" offers better compatibility with older players
Low cost of ownership
Cons
Has problems reading 99min CDRs (can write them OK)
CD-RW write support is only 8x speed
Slow x2 speed CSS ripping (1.8x)
Still No C2 error read mode
Can not write Safedisk 2.51+ (incorrect EFM encoder)
Slow reading Safedisk CDs
Very poor CD-R read performance
Poor quality media
No defect management for DVD-RWs
Pioneer has finally delivered on what we and most others wanted most in a DVD writer and that was an increase in DVD recording speeds. There is no disputing that the speed at which new DVD writers record to DVD-Rs at is light years ahead of the 1st generation drives - the A05 only needs 15mins to writes a whole 4.7GB of data.
We were slightly disappointed with the A05's CD writing ability, mainly its CD-R maximum writing speed of 16 X and its relatively slow re-write speed. It's interesting to note that the preliminary product specifications show that Pioneer had faster CD recordable features and higher DVD-ROM read speeds in mind but decided against implementing them.
We were pleased that Pioneer added support for writing in DAO-RAW mode - a useful feature used by Clone-CD for backing up games (in countries that permit it). This addition isn't all that it appears to be as its performance was so bad that it's pretty ineffective - it failed to backup any of our games and took long time to read them!
The A04 was particularly good at reading and writing 99min CD-Rs and was one of the best performers for that specific test - the DVR A05 does not follow its lead unfortunately. It can write to 99mins fine but when it came to reading what it had written it had severe problems (this was verified with disks that the A04 had produced).
One of the major improvements that we noticed with this drive was its random access times for DVDs - they are so much faster than the A04 and you wont be disappointed if you'r used to handling many small files.
The 4X DVD recording is an incredibly nice feature to have but unfortunately we didn't get to test it as 4 speed DVD-R and 2 speed DVD-RW disks are not out here in the UK and this is a PRE-RELEASE unit we have reviewed, but we hope to re-test the DVR-A05 with a full retail version if/when the opportunity arises.
The drive had major problems when reading CDs, whether it was a CD-ROM or CD-R it was incredibly fussy and slow. The access times for CDs was good but the transfer rate was slow for everyday use. This is an area where even the older A04 is better at.
With a price tag of £249.00 we feel that Pioneer may have been beaten at its own game by the likes of Sony, Philips, Panasonic and Sanyo who are all due to release 4 speed DVD writers (Sony have already released the DRU-500A in America) with faster recording speeds and more features. The A05 has its work cut out and our advice is wait and see what the competition offers.
EUR? (Score:1)
Interesting editorial slant... (Score:2)
Also, who cares about the speed of CD-R/RW burns on a DVD burner? If my major interest were burning CD-R/RW, I wouldn't be buying a DVD burner.
Frankly, everyone I know who has a DVD burner also has a CD burner.
Re:Interesting editorial slant... (Score:2)
I'VE GOT A PRICE... Sorta (Score:3, Interesting)
But I Found out that its due in here next week, I guess we (Japan Corp) sent it out to some manufacturers first, and they somehow got ahold of one.
As far as pricing goes, I have been told that dealer pricing is supposed to be the same as the A04, so whether or not the dealers will mark it up more or not is up to them, take it as you will. Im gonna get mine next week.
BTW 4x Burning Doesnt even matter when you don't have 4x media,
Re:Multistandard? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm waiting for one of the standards to go away or both to merge in all drives (betamax-fobia).
Sony [sonystyle.com] has a DVD-RW/+RW unit coming out next month. The positive reviews, speedy 4x DVD+RW write speed, and a pretty good pricepoint ($350) might make this a popular unit VERY quickly.
Re:Multistandard? (Score:3, Interesting)
Read above (Score:2)
Who cares if it burns faster if you're burning what are essentially coasters?