Is there? The only software I've seen that will span discs, is backup software or you could make archives such as RAR files using WinRar. Google is your Friend. Its been a long time since I used Nero, but if I remember right, Nero backup will do this. If God had intended us not to masturbate he would've made our arms shorter. George Carlin. Hi all, thanks for the responses. Homestly I didn't check to see if about the back up options in Nero, I just use the full burn window and little else.
Most of the back up work on cards is for customers who prefer CDs because they have older machines and aren;t sure if they have DVDs. These folks are generally not computer literate so rather than make them run around to find out I give them what they know works. I would prefer DVDs as well since it's less work for me. Saving as RAR or even ZIP is not practical as the jpegs and video files need to be easily accessed without having to unarchive it.
I'll try to check Nero later and see if it does it. Just tried Nero Back it up and it did exactly what I needed! I just have to remember to copy the cards to a folder at the root so as not to include the exact subfolder structure if I save to the desktop.
Anyway, Nero told me how many disks and when to put in the next one and allowed me to turn off any compression. There's a similar tax on CD's in the U. Probably also the primary reason you don't see cheap CD burners because they too have the "tax" applied and will only write to CD's with the "audio" lable on them.
Same goes for DAT recorders, its been suggested this tax was one of things that killed the format as a consumer format because of the excessive price. From my understanding this "tax" goes right into the RIAA's pocket which they ditribute to their members.
Even if you are recording your own music you're paying them to do it, by your own I mean music you have created let alone purchased from a store..
They are still trying up here in Canada. New rules have been proposed but not passed yet. In many cases, the performers themselves don't want the tax. The one on CDR blanks has never been distributed to performers since the powers that be have not been able to figure out a fair way to share out such revenues.
I have no problem swapping out DVD-R's, but really don't want to have to select what gets put on each disc manually. Dunno, but shouldn't you be copying the failing disk's data to another hard drive rather than burning photos from it?
I think Img Burn will do disk spanning. They are both free apps. Laptop hard drive. I don't have my adapter for it so I'm stuck with burning it. Thanks for the recommendations. Off to Google them now! ImgBurn will do it without a doubt. Possibly others too, but ImgBurn rules them all quite frankly. Because I sure as hell don't trust optical media. The best way to do this would be with an external HD The point is, if you have a drive that is failing or has bad sectors, you might run into some problems burning 80 gigs worth of data.
Another option might be to copy over the network You'll have to replace the failing drive anyway, no? So pull it out and put it in your PC, copy off what you want. One cool advantage here is portability, so the application is good to go from the moment download is done.
This allows it to be carried around on a flash drive in case you want to perform the same backup operation on a different PC. Just make sure to run it with administrator privileges so it can optimally use all functions. Several panels display files you load in the order you load them, groups on discs, as well as a file explorer for groups you select. Disk capacity needs to be specified, with a default DVD value already there. This value is used to determine the groups in which files are arranged so they fit perfectly without wasting any space.
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