• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Man, all of my old CDRs are corrupt.

Chaotic42

Lifer
The stuff I burned in college. It's all dead. Even Linux can't make sense of it.

Are there are any programs that will keep trying to read and never give up?
 
Originally posted by: halik
i've got 8 year old CDRs that work just fine... its just a matter of storing em right

Well, they all started crapping out when I took them on a flight to NYC back in 2000. I guess the cargo area wasn't climate controlled.
 
Originally posted by: acemcmac
Id kill myself if I lost some of the data that Ive been trusting to CDR's over the years

That's why I don't trust important data to CDRs alone. I have new CDRs and some hard drive space for those files.
 
Don't put too much faith in any CDs.. they all have a limited lifetime that's a lot shorter than advertised. I worked at a financial company that had a lot of CDs (containing market data) that are starting to go bad. These came from a large distributor who had the CDs professionally stamped. The CDs have all been kept in great condition - in temperature controlled room and not accessed very often. Recently we've been seeing the CDs from 10 yrs ago get corrupted, you can actually see holes in the layer when you examine them in front of a strong light.
 
If you can see that the reflective layer is going bad, then you are sol, but if it looks good, see if you can find your old CDDrive or an older drive--the faster speeds may be making it more difficult to read. Just a shot in the dark.
 
Back
Top