Strange issue with burned Data CD and DVDs - USA to Europe?

J

Justin

A strange issue was reported to me at my company's Christmas party. I'm
here in Pennsylvania - USA and I was told that burned discs don't read
very well in Sicily, Italy.
I'm not talking video, just data DVDs and CDs. Is there any reason for
this? Could they be using Unicode?
Other than a simple bad burn, would a disc burned int eh USA have
problems anywhere in the Eurozone?
 
D

dadiOH

Justin said:
A strange issue was reported to me at my company's Christmas party. I'm
here in Pennsylvania - USA and I was told that burned discs don't
read very well in Sicily, Italy.
I'm not talking video, just data DVDs and CDs. Is there any reason
for this? Could they be using Unicode?
Other than a simple bad burn, would a disc burned int eh USA have
problems anywhere in the Eurozone?

No. Data is data everywhere.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
 
M

Malke

Justin said:
A strange issue was reported to me at my company's Christmas party. I'm
here in Pennsylvania - USA and I was told that burned discs don't read
very well in Sicily, Italy.
I'm not talking video, just data DVDs and CDs. Is there any reason for
this? Could they be using Unicode?
Other than a simple bad burn, would a disc burned int eh USA have
problems anywhere in the Eurozone?

No, it doesn't matter where you live. What matters is how the disks were
burned. Probably the person who burned them used packet-writing software
like Nero's InCD or Roxio's Drag-to-Disc with a CD/DVD-RW. Then if the
recipient doesn't have packet-writing software or a UDF reader installed on
his computer, the disks look like they are blank.

This is one of the main reasons not to use packet-writing software and to
just use CD/DVD-Rs. With blank disks so cheap, there's no reason to use the
RWs any more and good reasons not to.

Malke
 

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