Windows 10 Will Kill The Installation DVD, Finally
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I had one that didn't spin down when I pressed the eject button on the drive. It briefly flew around the room like a Frisbee. It bounced off the wall and ended up on the floor. It didn't break but it was so scratched it became a coaster.
IMHO, flash drives a re a lot more reliable than optical disks. I've got 24 plus thumb drives kicking around and only ever had one die. I've had a few optical disks that were unreadable just because of a finger print or spot of dust. Scratch one and t all over for any data on it, and trust me, they are easy to scratch, even if your careful handling them. Dropping a thumb drive isn't going to hurt it. Unless its into a bucket of water or out of a window. :)
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Creative CD drives with turbo button, seen couple of them with disks blown up in them, plastic fragments with silver lining, pretty sight. And all those silver flakes inside .....
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Okaaaay.... Just imagining the noise gave me goose bumps up my spine. Thanks. Now I'm gonna have nightmares tonight
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I thought I was paranoid worrying about a paper stick on label coming unglued while spinning. Never heard of a DVD going pop in a drive before. Learn something new every day.
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I thought I was paranoid worrying about a paper stick on label coming unglued while spinning. Never heard of a DVD going pop in a drive before. Learn something new every day.
Never heard it, let me try to explain: Vrrrrrr, click click, buzzzzzz, swish, pop, crackle, grind ....... ouch !!!
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never heard it, let me try to explain: Vrrrrrr, click click, buzzzzzz, swish, pop, crackle, grind ....... Ouch !!!
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That's already 1000 words (one picture).
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I had one that didn't spin down when I pressed the eject button on the drive. It briefly flew around the room like a Frisbee. It bounced off the wall and ended up on the floor. It didn't break but it was so scratched it became a coaster.
IMHO, flash drives a re a lot more reliable than optical disks. I've got 24 plus thumb drives kicking around and only ever had one die. I've had a few optical disks that were unreadable just because of a finger print or spot of dust. Scratch one and t all over for any data on it, and trust me, they are easy to scratch, even if your careful handling them. Dropping a thumb drive isn't going to hurt it. Unless its into a bucket of water or out of a window. :)
That's not always the case. I got the user manual in a flash drive with my Zero Motorcycle and it was RAW. Wow, for the price, I would have taken a good old DVD. Never had one fail here. CD failed, but not DVD yet, neither Blu-rays
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That's already 1000 words (one picture).
So I take it "1000" is the answer to the equation if this is the after-math?
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Original, high volume CDs and DVDs are stamped, printed in the factory and are much more durable than home burned ones. Blank disks burned normally have different, organic matter based substrate and are subject to damage by heat and strong light and will deteriorate with time. I have hundreds of home made CDs and DVDs stashed for at least 10 years and recently used some to back them up on HDD. Some of them, about one in four or five was difficult or impossible to read. On the other hand, collection of music CDs I brought from Canada in early '90s are still going strong, those were factory printed. All worn out from use and scratched but still work like first day.
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So I take it "1000" is the answer to the equation if this is the after-math?
Going by the saying that one picture is worth thousand words. So, thousand pictures would make a good sized novel by that math.