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Apr '03

Pete's Corner: Time to buy a DVD Writer?

You've probably seen the new DVD-R or DVD+R drives on the shelves of your local computer store. While testing our new DVD stocks and media, I discovered some of the pros and cons of using these new drives. The decision to buy one of these burners will boil down to what uses you have for the new media. DVD burners are a bit more expensive than standard CDR burners. Currently most DVD burners are somewhere around $250-$400. CDR burners can range anywhere from $50 to $250. If you get the same quality DVDR and CDR drive, you are looking at about a $160-$200 difference.

The price may come down as more manufacturers enter the game, so right now the question becomes, "is it time for me to buy?". I've broken down some of the uses of these drives below:

Extended Storage and Backup
The best use for the new writable DVD media is for extended storage and backup. The average CDR holds about 700 MB of information. The average DVD-R, or DVD+R, holds 4.7 gigabytes. That's 6.7 times the information. If you are tired of using tape backups or using multiple CDRs to backup your data, the writable DVD is a great option. People with digital cameras will find this especially useful. High resolution images can fill your hard drive very quickly. The large capacity of this new media makes archiving your photos very easy. If you use a software based jukebox program such as MusicMatch, you may already have your entire CD collection on your hard drive. I was able to fit my entire collection on 5 DVDs. This is pretty incredible considering how much space all those CDs are currently taking up in my living room! You can fit about 50-60 CDs on just one DVD (MP3 format). If one of your CDs ever becomes too scratched to play, you'll be able to burn a new one straight from your DVD archive! In the near future we may see consumer DVD players which run in Jukebox mode. Just put one DVD in your player, and you've got fresh tunes for months. Hopefully they'll put an "auto-DJ" feature in, just like in the MusicMatch software.

Cutting Edge Home Video
If you shoot a lot of digital video, DVD is really the only option. This format will retain the full resolution of your initial footage. SVCD on a CDR is the next best option, but this will limit you in various ways. For instance, you can only fit 35-60 minutes of video at about half the resolution of a DVD. Compatibility with home players is also a problem. There are issues with both forms of media, but you'll have a better chance with a writable DVD than with a CDR. Don't expect your burned SVCD or DVD to work on everyone's home DVD player. Universal compatibility is not a reality quite yet. The best use is for your own enjoyment. Burn a DVD of your home videos and give it a try on your home player. If it doesn't work, bring the DVD with you to the local electronics store and test it out on the latest players. You'll find that most new models do support writable DVDs, and SVCDs. However, computers are generally much better at reading writable media, and Windows Media Player version 9 includes VCD, SVCD, XSVCD (this is a DVD format burned on a CDR) and DVD support.

Making Backup Copies of Your DVD Collection
Making backup copies of your home DVD collection would be a good use of these drives, but there are some legal issues. Most DVDs are encrypted. This is a method used to help prevent the illegal distribution, or playback of the digital content. A home user should have the "fair use" (a.k.a. "copy-right") of creating their own backup copies, however there is a law called the Digital Millenium Copyright Act that makes it illegal to circumvent any copy protection scheme. This law makes it impossible to create legal backup copies of your commercially purchased DVDs, since you would have to un-encrypt the content to make a copy.

A New Computer
If you're buying or putting together a new computer you should definitely consider the DVD writer as a component. These drives include the option to read CDs, CDRs, DVDs, DVDRs, as well the option to write to CDRs, CDRWs, DVDRs and DVDRWs. The multiple functionality of these drives is a great space saver, and you won't have to add a DVD writer later on. Sure, they're somewhere around $300, but consider what you would spend for a DVD-Rom drive plus a CDRW drive... and then consider that you'll probably be throwing one of those away when you finally do upgrade to the DVDR media.

Final Words
Writable DVD drives and media are still very new, but in the years to come we will see increased home player compatibility, and cheaper and higher capacity media. With the inclusion of interactive features, video, surround sound, and improved audio quality, DVD has become the preferred format for cutting edge multimedia projects. CDRs are still the value of the century, at somewhere around 26 cents a piece, you can burn large collections of media and data without making a huge dent in your wallet. This works out to about 0.0004 cents per meg of data. DVDs are about $2.00 apiece, but since they hold 6.7 times the information it's still about 0.0004 cents per meg of stored data. If it weren't for the CDR's superior consumer player compatibility, DVD media would already have dethroned the CDR as the king of digital storage. In the not-so-distant future, those old CDRs will be likened to today's floppy disk or vinyl record.

(By the way, I still have a huge collection of vinyl. Some formats are just too good to die!)

Related Article: Do you have questions about the different types of DVD media formats? Click here to read an article discussing the differences between DVD-R, +R, -RW, +RW and RAM.

If you have any questions or comments about this article, please drop us a line at editor@surething.com.


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