LaCie d2 DVD±RW Drive

User Manual page 24

Helpful Technical Information
Disc at Once (DAO) – A DVD writing process in
which the entire DVD is recorded in one session, and
data cannot be added after the recording is finished. Dif-
fers from the CD-R DAO method because the lead-in,
data area and lead-out areas are all written sequentially.
Session at Once (SAO) – A writing process which
is similar to DAO, where all of the information is writ-
ten in one session, but SAO allows for the ability to be-
gin another session and record at a later time. is mode
allows for greater control of the recording process than
Packet Writing (PW) or TAO, and more disc space can
be utilized bec ause there is no need for gaps between
tracks.
Incremental Recording (IR) – A writing process
that is similar to the Session at Once (SAO) CD-
R writing method; files may be added directly to the
DVD-R disc one recording at a time, instead of record-
ing the files to a hard drive before writing the disc. e
minimum recorded size, though, must be at least 32KB
(even if the file to be recorded is smaller than that), and
capacities and write speeds are decreased due to the
overhead of combined lead-in/out areas and data. Also,
the disc must be finalized before it may be played back
by a drive other than the drive recording the disc.
Multi-Border Recording (MBR) – A writing pro-
cess that is very similar to IR, MBR allows you to make
an IR disc and then play the disc back on a device that
recognizes this type of recording method. MBR creates
a very short boundar y zone around a recording session
so a compatible player or DVD-ROM drive does not
attempt to play beyond the border of the recorded area,
instead allowing the unfinalized disc to be read by a
player that supports this recording method.
Restricted Overwriting (RO) – With this method,
if a disc has already been written to, new data segments
can be randomly inserted anywhere within the recorded
boundary. New data, however, can only be added to an
area of the disc that has already been recorded over and
from the point where the last session was stopped.
Packet Writing (PW ) – A drag-and-drop writ-
ing process writing process that is very useful for data
backup. Buffer underrun* is impossible in this mode,
because the data is w ritten in “packets” of a few KBs.
Packet Writing is a CPU-intensive process because it
constantly checks the available space on the disc.
TeChNICAl NOTe: *Buffer Underrun – e
recording of a disc is a system-intensive application,
and the rewritable drive needs a constant stream of
data. A buffer underrun occurs when the stream of
data to the rewritable drive is not fast enough to
keep the rewritable drive’s buffer full, causing the
an error in the recording process. If this problem
occurs often, turn down the recording speed.
DAO SAO IR MBR RO PW
CD X X X
DVD X X X X
4.2. DVD±RW Writing Methods