I think the rental stores can get a reasonably priced replacement for a damaged disk. But if they could get low-cost replacements for lost discs, who's going to stop them from being dishonest? Obviously there's no way to prevent this dishonesty. I'm willing to bet that there is no such thing...
It's true that a lot of the large fines people accumulate on their Blockbuster acocunts would never be paid anyway, because the renter just decides never to go back. But it's false to say that the fines are arbitrary, and don't have any bearing on Blockbuster's costs. Yes, they have a whole...
gwai-lo? chi sin! hahahaha
What you meant to say is "they're just SD." If it's not HDTV, who cares?!
Can anyone tell me a good DVD player for MP3 DVD+Rs, with good navigation features? (e.g., a player that shows more of long filenames)
Is there any player that has particularly good navigation features for MP3s? I.e. plays DVD+R MP3 discs, and shows a respectable number of characters from filenames, or does random play across directories. Maybe even show you ID3 tags.
Actually the term DMZ is not being used correctly in this context (which may be D-Link's fault for calling it that). A true DMZ is a set of hosts with a route to and from the Internet and a private network. In this context, what they call the DMZ is the host behind a network address translator...
I've had many problems with my Netgear, while the D-Link has worked pretty well. The DI-514 is 11 Mbps. The DI-614+ is 22 Mbps (if you have compatible client hardware).
This is a good deal! It's almost $50 cheaper than the Optorite and NEC combo drives, and it's faster - 4x DVD+R and 4x DVD+RW. The only other drive that does 4x +RW is the Sony 510, which is around $270. The BenQ also comes with software, even in this "Ultra" white box.
I bought the drive. It's a BenQ DW400A with 8 MB buffer. So far it's worked perfectly with all my Khypermedia 2.4x DVD+R and CompUSA 2.4x DVD+RW media.
8x is no problem! That works out to be about 10 MB/sec. My brand new 7200 rpm drive can do 30 MB/sec. My 2-year-old 5400 rpm drive can manage 14 MB/sec. It would be a bit of a stretch for that old drive, but no problem for any 7200 rpm drive from the last 3 years or so.
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