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Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player
Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player







disable commentary in macgo blu ray player
  1. #Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player pro
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So while I am a fan of having images in the cloud I'd say it is our duty as photographers to make sure our clients are actually printing their most important photos and storing them as we have done for years. After all I have photos from my childhood 35 years old in perfect condition in albums. Maybe we should go back to sliding them behind plastic in photo albums.

#Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player pro

In fact, thanks to Apple, these days many laptops are not even coming with disc readers (such as the Macbook Pro I am using to type out this post.)Įven better than having images in the cloud is having printed photos in a book. While the transition for some clients has been hard to accept, (after all they believe the mighty disc to be indestructible with a forever lifespan) viewing and downloading images from the cloud is becoming more and more acceptable. It seems the list continues to grow each year with more companies offering the cloud solution. Some of these options include PASS, Pixiset, ShootProof, Get Digitized, Zenfolio, Smugmug and many others.

#Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player download

Now rather than burning photos to discs to give to our clients we can upload them into a cloud and provide a gallery link where they can download their images or order prints. Any disc that gets a little use seems to always get scratched even while taking the utmost care to protect it.įortunately, over the last few years other solutions have become available. The second major reason is they get scratched, damaged and unreadable. We might take great care of the disc of our wedding images for the first year, but suddenly during the move to a new house it gets boxed up only to never be found again. But these discs are not widely available, cost significantly more and still are prone to the two major reasons discs are a bad storage idea. In an effort to provide another alternative disc makers began using gold in their discs thereby increasing the suspected lifespan of those discs to over 100 years. While silver is less expensive and more widely used, it is more prone to oxidation resulting in a non-reflecting surface." As well as degradation of the dye, failure of a CD-R can be due to the reflective surface. In CD-R media, the dye itself can degrade, causing data to become unreadable. In a CD-RW disc, the recording layer is made of an alloy of silver and other metals-indium, antimony, and tellurium. CD-R media have an internal layer of dye used to store data. ( See National Archives FAQ's for Record Managers for more info.)Īccording to Wikipedia, "burned CD-Rs suffer from material degradation, just like most writable media. In fact, one site set up by the government to assist records managers in the storage of archives suggests that unrecorded disc life is only 5-10 years and written discs have a lifespan of 2-5 years. Sadly, what they don't realize is that most research has led to the conclusion that the average disc lifespan is about 10 years. Often when people think of a burned disc they have a mindset that this little polycarbonate reflective donut will last forever.









Disable commentary in macgo blu ray player