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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 29 7:57 am)



Subject: CD-R or CD-RW for my Poser archives?


Dr Zik ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:06 AM · edited Mon, 25 November 2024 at 10:22 PM

Hi Folks! This weekend I plan to begin transferring all of the Poser materials I've stored on my hard drive and storage disks to my newly acquired PowerBook G3 laptop. I want to create a CD archive of all the free props and morphs I've downloaded over the years. My sales contact at MicroCenter suggested I buy "one-way" CDs rather than the CD-RW disks because the reusable ones only have a shelf life of 1-2 years before data loss sets in (?). Anyone else heard of this? How are the old CDs you've burned holding up? I'd appreciate any answers y'all have, because once I burn the disks I'm going to erase the duplicate files from my Jaz and Zip disks. Peter (Dr Zik)


bk321467SKYNET ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:22 AM

I don't use CD-RW for my backups, too many problems. I save on CDR and with GHOST. And it allows me to restore only one file if it is necessary. Michel


Bia ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:29 AM

thats a good tip! Is Ghost the brand name or do you mean a generic ghosting program? Thanks :)


Bia ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:37 AM

Oh, does anyone know if the life for cdrw disks for consumer audio components (not computer audio) have the same problem?


bk321467SKYNET ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:42 AM

I hesitate to answer :o) Humor or it is not , the problem of the translators. it is well the Norton Ghost Michel who regrets that his English is not better


Marque ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 10:54 AM

I never use CDRW to back anything up that I plan to keep, I only use those to keep works in progress and then I back up on regular CDR when I'm done. I also use Ghost, it's an excellent program if you want to keep your settings on CD. Marque


bjbrown ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 11:38 AM

I personally don't use CDRW. If it's something I plan on altering, I keep it on hard drive. If it's something I plan to never alter (like downloaded props, etc.), then it goes on CDR. Plus, the last time I price checked, CDRs were going for less than $1 each, while CDRWs were going for $20 each. The definite price advantage goes to CDR, even if you have to burn a new one for updates every once in a while.


stallion ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 11:38 AM

I use CDR's with Adaptec Create CD with this you don't have to fill the whole 650megs in one session this way I may download 100mgs a week then at the end of the week transfer from my hard drive to disk until its full works great

You might as well PAY attention, because you can't afford FREE speech


Kayleb ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 11:45 AM

CDR's can be had for around $.35 each and will last. I just put a file on my hard drive called poser and subdir's with texture,poses,characters,props etc in it. When it gets to a bit over 600megs write it to cd and delete the folders and start over again.


Bia ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 12:00 PM

Michel... it's not you...it's me...I don't know about those ghosting programs so i wanted to make sure. Your english is fine! :)


Bia ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 12:03 PM

I have adaptec on my computer (it came with it), so I will try that. But I still need to get a ghosting program for my change over to a new HD soon. Is there one anyone recommends for win2000, good for the technically challenged and can write directly to the CD? :)


bk321467SKYNET ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 12:19 PM

It is not anything Bia, just that the English humor is not the same that ours and I don't know ever when it is serious or not. With Norton Ghost I make the files under DOS, of = / - 600 megas, but not on CD's I control the files under Windows and I put them after on CD :o)


RobinOberg ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 1:24 PM

Adaptec (Roxio) CD creator 5 can format both cdr and cdrw discs to udf format with compression. That way it will store alot more than just the 700mb of space that fits on aregular disc. Personally, if i could afford it i would go with only cd-rw because on the contrary to popular belief they have a life-span of 10 or more years. that is with the gold embedded records ofcourse... (no cd can last more then 10yrs without a loss of data so if i where you i would try to store them on vinyl or internet harddiscs since they are easily updated with no data loss.)


veamon ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 2:09 PM

the color doesnt matter, its just dye. go with a cdr, cause then you wont accidentally erase it like you can with a cdrw


stoney54 ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 2:46 PM

We have the C D wizard program installed on our computers and after learning the hard way ( Computer crashes, etc.), I now try to put most critical items on C D. However I use C D RW's, I find them fairly cheap at Wallmarts, but they are a brand name, then I use them in much the way I use to 3 1/2 floppies, I stick them in and add things until they are close to full. I hope they have a longer shelf life , then what was talked about above. The very most critical items of all ( now), I make 2 copies of on 2 seperate C D RW's, just in case, I have had some(cd-rw's) to fail on me. I am not part of the computer generation and would love some more info on CD-RW's, My Main Question is : am I wrong putting my trust in CD-RW's ??


adh3d ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 3:12 PM

if you wnat to storage files that you want to stay there forever, use Cdr. I use CDRW wit Adaptec direct cd, so i can write in the cdrw like the cdrw was a diskette or a hd.I use it to storage temp files, or files i am going to work with them after several weeks



adh3d website


AgentSmith ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 5:36 PM

I NOW use cd-rw along with cd-r's because I used to think I didn't need cd-rw's. I would wait for 650Mb of info to amass on my hard drive and then back up on cd-r. THEN, my hard drive failed...I lost EVERYTHING I had not backed up to that point (I didn't want to burn `til I reached 650Mb). When you have spent around 100 hours building your first 3D models and then lose them because you didn't use cd-rw's...you will instantly start wanting to use them. USE cd-rw's! If you are afraid they crap out after 2-3 years...then replace them, they can be bought for around $1.00 a piece now, so no excuse there. I have never had a problem with cd-rw's in any way (losing data). (I use a Yamaha drive & Roxio ez cd creator 5 platinum). I also FULLY erase them after a year, re-format them and stick the files back on, just in case the formatting has been comprised whatsoever. I also suggest using 2 backup's of the same info, never FULLY trust any computer-wise to NOT fail you. Do I sound paranoid yet? If it's data that won't change in content, use cd-r's, if it's ongoing work projects, use cd-rw's, otherwise you will want to wait for a full cd amount of info to burn and you will wait...and maybe lose everything.

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"I want to be what I was when I wanted to be what I am now"


shadowcat ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 7:05 PM

CD-Rs are cheap enough too burn more than one copy of your backups, that way you have one to use and the other to save. Time is not what wears out the disk, it's using the disk, so have a backup for your backup. I actually have a CD-R with only michael and vicky on it. I had nothing else to back up at the time, but I was not about to risk losing a file I paid 40-60 dollars on, for the sake of a cheap CD-R disk. (I bought 50 disks for $8)


shawnvb ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 8:10 PM

I wouldn't rely on any cd working all of the time. I have about 4 cdr's that failed on me with no other backup of the stuff on them. I am slowly trying to find everything to replace the disks that went bad. I don't trust any cd anymore!


Dr Zik ( ) posted Wed, 25 July 2001 at 9:18 PM

Hi Folks! Thanx for all the advice. I'll probably continue to save to a Jaz disk until I reach 700MB (the new carbon CDR disks can hold that much--anybody using them?) and burn the files to a CDR. Peter (Dr Zik)


dlfurman ( ) posted Thu, 26 July 2001 at 12:30 AM

WHATEVER YOU DO, JUST BACKUP THOSE FILES. I had a major crash with two HDDs going bad, and one trying to take over the File Allocation Tables of another, trashing a week spent trying to recover files (And as I go through them, some of the recovered files may have to go). Powerquest's LOST AND FOUND is a fantastic program for recoveriing files lost (even on a format), but I'd rather backup than have to recover stuff again. I have a semi-permanent solution right now, but back 'em up!

"Few are agreeable in conversation, because each thinks more of what he intends to say than that of what others are saying, and listens no more when he himself has a chance to speak." - Francois de la Rochefoucauld

Intel Core i7 920, 24GB RAM, GeForce GTX 1050 4GB video, 6TB HDD space
Poser 12: Inches (Poser(PC) user since 1 and the floppies/manual to prove it!)


MartinC ( ) posted Thu, 26 July 2001 at 2:44 AM

Peter, it's hard to say anything about the real lifespan of CDRs and CDRWs right now - you hear claims between 1-2 years and a 100 years for CDRs, and most often something around 30 years. Nevertheless, I would prefer CDRs for backup, and CDRWs only for temporary "scratch backups", like raw scans, audio dumps, etc. etc. The density of the "writing" is much weaker on CDRW (that's why old CR players can't even read them), so I would expect a much shorter lifespan for them. But (and this is a big "but"), it is a known fact that the writing precision gets worse on the outside of discs, meaning that the chance to lose data gets bigger the more you write on them (all CDs are written inside->outside). Every test (I've ever seen) strongly recommended not to fill CDs up to the limit if it is supposed to be a precious backup, they typically recommended to use about 500 MB maximum, and to avoid the 700MB CDRs completely (for backups). On Mac you will probably use Toast, make sure to turn on one of the "optimise" options - this way the whole volume shrinks to its minimum size on CD. Without it, the blocks will be left where they are, and the CD will be filled "to the fringe" even if contains much less real data.


ronstuff ( ) posted Fri, 27 July 2001 at 1:55 PM

I have found CDRW to be unreliable and have lost data even after just one year. With blank CD's so cheap (I buy silver blanks for less than 20 cents each in bulk) I just Burn everything to CD as soon as I have a diskload. Then I use a utility for atuomatically cataloging my CDS in a database format so that I can instantly find any item. I probably have 500 CDs of data archived and have never lost anything. And it never takes more than a couple of minutes to find anything. Forget CDRW - save up for DVD-R


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