| BENTSEN GROVE RESORT COMPUTER
CLUB
BULLETIN Week of February 6, 2006 |
|
MEETINGS
MONDAY
ROOM 3 & 3R GENERAL |
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUPS:
Our bulletin is also available on line by visiting http://www.bgrcc.com/ and clicking on bulletin. You may also select bulletins by its subject. |
NEED
SOME HELP TRY http://www.bgrcc.com/ Click on HELP EMERGENCY RESPONSE
TEAM
John Abbott……424-0537Harold Buechly...581-3180 Corinne Higbee...585-5664 |
| UPCOMING
EVENTS: Please
wear your badge! Monday February 6th 2006, 9:30, Beginners Meeting By Corinne Higbee 10:30, General Meeting By John Abbott - Harold Buechly Special guest speaker Jose Dominguez Monday February 13th Monday February 20th, 10:30 Door prize Drawing 10:35 Bill Wiess will accept questions on photography and cameras. Noon, Pizza Sig at Mr. Gatti's |
| Special guest
speaker Jose Dominguez of www.riowave.net
will talk about his business he has developed in McAllen and shipping
world wide. He specializes in cables to connect components to computers
and cameras for commercial use. Jose is knowledgeable in
digital video and audio. Bring your questions with you this week. |
|
Care and Feeding of CD’s By Lynn L. Kauer, Editor Saginaw Valley Computer Association
llkauer@chartermi.net I read an interesting article in the September 2005 issue of Popular Photography written by David D. Busch titled, “The Truth About Disc Rot.” It paralleled some other magazine and news articles I have read on the same subject. The following is what we should know and understand about CD (and DVD) discs as storage devices. For the purposes of this article, CD’s and DVD’s are considered the same as far as backup media is concerned. The only difference is that DVD’s can hold more data. When a CD is burned, a laser shoots through the bottom of the disc into the dye layer located under the top protective plastic covering on at the top of the CD. This is the layer where the laser burns pits into the dye layer to allow the compute to interpret what is being written by the computer. When the bottom side of the disc becomes scratched or soiled, the laser is diffused and the data is not clearly written. How often have you watched someone open a CD case and directly pull on the edges of a CD until it is released from the case? Notice how the CD is bent while it is being removed? This bending is causing tiny cracks to develop in the reflective (protective) layer of the CD. To properly remove a CD from the case, press down on the inside of the retaining plastic that holds the CD in place. This causes the retaining ring to become slightly smaller so that the CD slides off easily with out bending forces. CD-R is a disc that that can be written to once while CD-RW are discs that can be written to many times reportedly 1000 times. CD’s that the least reliable for archival purposes are the CD-RW’s. These discs include a layer that is altered by the CD burner each time it is rewritten. Experience has shown that when these discs are used with another computer, it is a common for the second computer to be unable to read it. I burn a new music CD monthly for each show that I do. (I entertain at nursing and retirement homes.) I burned and placed the CD-RW into my karaoke player, it would not recognize it. In addition, my second computer would not recognize it either. Only the computer that originally burned the CD was able to read it! Imagine if I had saved all of my music and photo images on a CD-RW. When the computer would eventually be replaced, the disc would likely be unreadable. It is better to save data on CD-R discs, as they are readable with any computer with a CD player. There are many types of dyes used for the production of a CD. To quote the above mentioned author, “Under the NIST’s accelerated “stress test,” which includes exposure to very bright light, high temperature and humidity, recorded CD discs using phthalocyanine dye combined with a gold/silver allow reflective layer proved to be considerably more stable than all other types of CD-R media. Discs using azo dye as the data layer had less stability under light, temperature and humidity testing. Media using cyanine dye performed well when exposed to light, but had longevity problems under temperature and humidity stress. Manufactures recommend storing CD’s vertically in a cool, dry area instead of horizontally. The reason is to prevent warping and damage from humidity. Also, never use solvent based pens to write on them similar to permanent felt tipped pens. The solvent can penetrate the protective layer and damage the reflective layer below. The only safe place to write on the top of a CD is in the clear center portion of the hub when using a felt tipped pen. For discs that I intend to keep for archival purposes I print the contents on the label with an ink jet printer — www.fellowes.com. Like the 1.4 MB floppy drive, tape drives, Zip discs and LS 120 disks that are no longer being used, the CD as we know it will likely bite the dust in about ten years. I predict the media of choice for backup and archival purposes will be that of external drive media similar to USB jump drives and flash card burners or other external drive sources. Personally, I use a 160 GB external hard drive to backup my computer data including music and photo files. Because of transportability, I also backup my music and photos on CD’s and store them at an offsite location in a safety deposit box. |