DVD burner farm

jim ruxton cinetron-uEvt2TsIf2EsA/PxXw9srA at public.gmane.org
Wed Jan 26 06:51:21 UTC 2005


As I said earlier the problem with stamping is I need output right away
ie. I'm shooting something then need a bunch of DVDs so stamping is out
of the question.
Jim
> Just curious why one would be interested in DVD Region Coding or the Content
> Scrambling System?
> Unless your a member of the MPAA, of course.
> 
> Mr. Spencer is right, though.  If you're talking about any significant
> volume, stamping should be cheaper.
> 
> My 5 cents.
> Amos "The Compudoc" Weatherill
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org [mailto:owner-tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org]On Behalf Of Henry
> Spencer
> Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 11:40 PM
> To: tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org
> Subject: RE: [TLUG]: DVD burner farm
> 
> 
> On Tue, 25 Jan 2005, jim ruxton wrote:
> > Even if that is true I want to be able to quickly pump out the DVDs and
> > probably don't have time to burn a master...
> 
> What sort of production volume are you looking at?  The stamping processes
> used in commercial production of CDs and DVDs are *much* cheaper than any
> burning process... provided you are buying hundreds or thousands of copies.
> (And provided you're willing to deal with a factory; this is not something
> you can do in your basement.)
> 
> Those processes can also do things you *cannot* do with burning, like
> producing honest-to-God DVDs (not DVD-Rs or DVD+Rs).  The differences go
> deeper than just the physical details of the disks; for example, if I
> recall correctly, you cannot burn a DVD which has region codes or the
> commercial-DVD encryption, because the "keys" region of the disk is
> unwritable (all zeros) in all the consumer-priced burnable formats.
> 
>                                                           Henry Spencer
>                                                        henry-lqW1N6Cllo0sV2N9l4h3zg at public.gmane.org
> 
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