Tguyus opened this issue on Feb 27, 2007 · 43 posts
Jim Burton posted Thu, 01 March 2007 at 12:38 PM
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2. Get retail rather than OEM version of burner to get software.
I bought a OEM version of my second Lite-on, BTW, as I read the original (Nero) drivers would still work (It was a newer model, slightly faster)
Guess what, they didn't work!
I found a set of "generic" Nero drivers though, for about $10, which did work, but I'll buy the Retail version next time!
Incidently, I've been building my own systems since my last pre-assembled one (which was a 386), and let me say it is getting easier and easier to set them up. While you don't save a lot of money building them yourself, you do get better components.
The downside is if there is a problem... I've had bad memory, bad motherboards, bad drives, sometimes it is hard to figure out what is wrong, too. But components do seem to be getting better.
The ATI cards (at least some of them) are supposed to have problems with 64-bit Windows, I hear. My "old" system has a ATI workstation card (a 9800 Pro), the new one has a ATI gaming card (a 1950X), the later seems to run Max 9 AND Poser better, if anything, but it doesn't really support dual monitors (in spite of what ATI says). I'm going to try a second video card in the new box.
After I lost a couple months of work in my old-old system I got a lot more religious about backing up my new-old system (which has RAID 0, plus a dedicated backup drive). However, as the new-new system is on RAID 10 I don't plan on doing many backup (RAID 10, as you probably know is RAID 0 + 1, you need 4 identical drives). Still, I make my living on the computer, for others it might not be worth it.