Sensible sessions save CD space
Tip The price of recordable CD drives is plummeting, and blank 650Mb discs no longer cost the earth. That makes CD-R awfully intriguing for a variety of uses, many of which violate copyright laws. But two of the best applications for this storage mechanism are quite legal: archiving and backup. CD-R drives are relatively fast. Even a first-generation CD-R drive will move more than 10Mb per minute, filling a disc in about an hour. And CD-R offers unbeatable reliability. Once you write to a CD-ROM disc, you can't change a byte. An unalterable record like that can be an advantage if, for example, you need to keep an audit trail. But there's also an ugly side to CD permanence: if you don't want to fill a disc all at once, you must make multisession CDs. Multisession simply means you write to a given CD on more than one occasion or session. Each session requires not only a separate directory -- which means a few hundred kilobytes of overhead -- but also its own lead-in track, akin to the spiral between tracks of an old vinyl LP record. That lead-in track swallows a full 13Mb, so you lose at least that much with every CD session. If you back up a few files every day, CD space disappears faster than beer at a beach party. The simple rule, then, is to be discriminating in how you back up. Make a full backup with a CD-R so you can reconstitute your system quickly if disaster strikes. Refresh the backup on a monthly schedule, or more often if your budget allows, but use a conventional system for incremental backups in the meantime. This advice also applies to other CD-R uses. For example, to get the most out of every blank CD, record all your multimedia files in as few sessions as possible. - Winn L Rosch | Category: Hardware Issue: Dec 1996 Pages: 164 |
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