It's a thing....play around with the letters and you'll see the answer and how it pertains to one of the largest sport gaming events that occurs this time of year in the US on a Sunday afternoon.
I don't want the NFL suing us for using their trademark.D'OH! Now it is obvious.
So I bought some used CDs last week via eBay and the Amazon.com marketplace. They were all supposed to be in very good condition. Of the 13 CDs, 3 had enough damage that I couldn't rip them. Several other were very dirty and needed cleaning. One of the unrippable CDs I was able to polish enough so it could be ripped accurately. The other two had damage to the reflective layer from the top side of the disc. Once the reflective layer is damaged you're done. I've bought a lot of used CDs in the past and didn't have this sort of miss rate due to damaged discs. Every once in a while I'd get one that needed a little polishing to rip, but basically never got discs that had damage to the reflective layer. :frusty:
Now I've got messages in to the sellers (one eBay, one Amazon Marketplace). I'm not expecting any grief, but it's still a hassle. I can only imagine what you get when you buy used CDs in acceptable or fair condition.
Buying digital music is generally against my principles.What are these CDs? Can't you find this music somewhere to purchase digitally that would be a lot less effort than buying and ripping?
Use Meguiar's PlastX and a piece of microfiber cloth. For a whole CD put something like a pea size dab of PlastX on the microfiber which you should have folded up some so you have something like a 1" x 1" piece in contact with the bottom of the disc. Work it around the bottom of the CD in small circular patterns. The polish will clear up as you work it in. Once it's basically gone from working it in wipe the bottom of the CD with another microfiber cloth or a dry part of the cloth you used for polishing. Examine the bottom of the disc to see your progress. Repeat as necessary. If you're only doing spot treatments, a dab of PlastX polish more like a grain of rice sized works. Unless you have really bad scratches one or two polishing passes should have it polished out. It goes surprisingly quick and only takes a few minutes of polishing.What process do you do to polish a scratched disc?
I've found Blu-rays are quite a bit harder to scratch than DVDs or CDs. However, the reflective layer is on the bottom of the substrate, not in the middle like DVDs or on the top like CDs. They have some sort of scratch resistant coating over the reflective layer that's supposed to be somewhat self healing, but because it's so thin and somewhat pliable due to the self healing it doesn't generally lend itself to polishing. You might try taking a hair dryer to it and see if you can't heat the coating and encourage some self healing if the scratch is shallow. Otherwise if all else is lost and you've got nothing else to lose you could try polishing it carefully. Just keep in mind you can't just keep polishing over and over till it's gone like you can on a DVD or CD. Deep scratches on Blu-rays are fatal.Damn, Blu-ray was going to be my next question. I have Blu-rays I own I can't use because they have a tiny stupid scratch.
What do you mean by host device? The source of the data for the file copy? I've tried other folders and files with the same results, and I can copy those same folders and files to other drives.Are you sure there is no defect in the host device?
I don't have another one with me, nor another uSD card to test with (I'm not taking the one out of my phone). I also don't have a microSD to SD adapter which would let me use the reader in my laptop. So, I will have to wait until I get home, but it reads fine, so I wouldn't expect the reader is to blame.The reader.
I have no idea how many optical drives I bought during that time period. I'm sure it was a lot more than 0 though.Speaking of optical discs...I just filled out my claim for a few optical drives for this class action.
I decided to go peruse my e-mail...I think it's based on the honor system. I have receipts for probably 5 optical drives bought during that timeframe.
Is it just me or are poly tests getting weirder and weirder?
Customers are realizing how ineffective polys actually are and the vendors are trying to outrun the efficacy results with "new methods".
Also known as precision vs accuracy.
I just use the nVidia screen cap utility and then crop in post.