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DVD - RAM support?!?!
Erasing anything from anywhere on the disc gives you the space back seamlessly like DVD-RAM. Official DVD format. Most newer Pioneer and some Sony DVD Players will play these discs, so fairs better than DVD-RAM. Cheap media (~£1.00). Cons: Still not very compatible. Little choice of machines that support this

DVD+RW Compatability?
Peter Osterlund pete...@telia.com fa linux kernel This patch makes it possible to use the packet writing driver with DVD-RAM discs. The pktcdvd driver is not needed for writing to DVD-RAM discs but it can improve write performance. Polgár István reports: I wrote 178716Kb data to DVD-RAM without pktcdvd driver

DVD-RAM support in Linux for reading/writing data
I take it from what you are saying is that I need a DVD drive that says it supports writting DVD-Ram disk. I have been looking and have seen drives say they support DVD-Ram disks. So do I just need a new drive that will read a DVD-Ram disk or a driver? "AJR" wrote: There is no "quality" difference between DVD-R and

Which DVD Recorder?
Hopefully, there is someone else out there trying to use both a DVD-RAM and a CD-RW. If you have been able to get this to work with any brand DVD-RAM and any brand CD-RW I would like to know what drivers you are using. I have a support call in to Software Architects for the WriteDVD, touting it as a Win2K problem

DRIVER for Toshiba DVD-RAM (for kernel 2.2.11)
(I've seen the former called DVD-Dual.) I think part of it is that to officially support DVD-Multi you MUST support DVD-Audio, which hasn't received widespread support at this time. And there is the physical catridge requirement for DVD-RAM that adds cost and complexity to the unit (it has to handle non-catridge

Read DVD-RAM
to DVD-RAM? Is this kernel support? If not, are there = > development/beta versions of Linux that incorporate or plan this = > support? Is the support harware specific (Sony, Hitachi, Panasonic, etc)? = > Thanks. = = Kernel 2.2.16 supports at least SCSI-DVD-RAMs using the SCSI-CDROM driver. = (eg /dev/sr0).

DVD-RAM support on UW7.1/OU8?
Little support? There are more than 40 DVD recorders across 6 manufacturers offering DVD-RAM. And this is from the DVD recorders currently in production (not counting the ones that have now been They might as well fit the same drive as used in their DVD recorders, even if that means including DVD-RAM support.

DVD-RAM writing
Now
if I was as biased towards DVD- like a certain person and site is towards +RW, I would be telling everyone how important this support from Microsoft is and how DVD-RAM will now be the defacto standard etc etc, of course I will not as it is a load of rubbish, Microsoft isn't supporting any format exclusively and

FS: Toshiba Tecra 8000, P2-333, 128MB RAM, 14.1" TFT, DVD, 56K ...
When he gets back in I will try one of my Deva DVD-RAM disks and see if it reads it. I might also add that I bought my first ever Windows installation, XP Home, SP2 and with Boot Camp installed Windows on the new Mac. Windows runs beautifully (well, as beautifully as it can --- I still find it to be incredibly ugly

DVD RAM being support under RISCOS?
Charles Tomaras toma...@tomaras.com rec arts movies production sound http://dvd.consumerelectronicsnet.com/articles/viewarticle.jsp?id=38220.

Tomcat IV 1564 Dual: Does SCSI DVD-RAM need hardware support?
To clarify, this is a Pentium II clocked at 333MHz with 128 MB of RAM. It's the latest model Tecra 8000 from Toshiba. I have also made the appropriate CD-R, CD-RW (read only) DVD Compatibility: DVD-ROM, (no DVD RAM support) Internal use in SelectBay only Video 256-Bit NeoMagic ™ 2200 Multimedia Graphics

In lieu of Dantz tech support
It records in both DVD-RAM and DVD-R (general purpose disks) formats. You can buy the RAM blanks for around 3 or 4 bucks. The DVD-R blanks are now selling for as low as 1.00 ea. Recording modes are XP, SP, LP, EP, and FR (Flexible Rate which changes your bit rate to the specific movie time (length). Great feature!

DVD-RAM Drive Support
DVD-RAM is a sector-based format, which uses hard-sectored media. IIRC, the technique used is similar to the Panasonic "Phase Changer" technology, which itself was more like MO technology than CD technology. So DVD-RAM can be thought of as a simple changeable SCSI medium, with random access to all blocks,

DVD Movies?
For USB DVD-RAM in 2.4, I think the root evil is the dmesg complaint "kernel: sr0: scsi-1 drive", which in turn arises from the host substituting vendor-specific op x1A for MMC op x5A "MODE SENSE (10)". I'm guessing PATAPI DVD-RAM breaks over some other issue, found in the drivers/ide/ide-cd.c of ide-cd.o rather

WHAT ARE THE CHANCES OF DVD-RAM SUCCEEDING???
The fact that DVD-RAM doesn't play in current DVD players is an unimportant one. Today, it's amazingly important. The way support works in the industry is simple: demand If consumers don't ask for DVD-RAM, it won't show up across the board. There is currently no rush to put DVD-RAM support in set-top players.

DVD-RAM-Support in 2.3???
I would seriously get on the phone to various DVD manufacturers and talk with a tech-support and marketing person to talk about Linux support. As far as I'm aware all DVD burners work with linux - use cdrecord-prodvd to burn them and all currently available formats (except dvd-ram which only needs formatting and

DVD Multi Drive
I also have a support page which has tutorials as well as the latest download updates for various programs most of which are on the latest SalesMart 700Mb CD which is given when customers buy DVD burners or spindles of 25/50 DVD-R media or packs of 5 DVD-RAM 3X media through SalesMart. DVD-RAM 3X 4.7Gb Media from

HITACHI GF-2000 DVD RAM
I was hoping a could capture 704x480 MJPEG streams directly onto a spacious DVD-RAM disk. They also said the access times were poor, but again, it could have Windows 98 support seems to be native, UDF or FAT32. Does this mean Windows NT support is native too (UDF or NTFS)? Anyone know about Linux support yet?

Microlite Announces Linux, Unix Backup/Recover Support for ...
DVD+RW can be over-written up to 1000 times. Technically, and can also be used in a packet writing mode. DVD+R is a write once. All of course have random access once written. What is being "on its way to obsolete" with DVD-RAM devices is their SCSI versions. The original SCSI versions supported DVD-RAM reading and

Any DVD-R writers support DVD-RAM reading yet?
Michael Skuczas mskuc...@comcast.net alt video dvdr Well I like some the features of DVD-Ram but it's current support in players..well. I will admit that Panasonic does plan to support it thier players, The thing I am looking for is in a situation were I recorded a TV show and a friend asks me if I recorded it