hi caffeinated.
first, please clarify the following:
caffeinated wrote:Depending on whether they were close to full, I left them either "as is", so that I could more data to them later, or "formated so that any CD reader could read them"; none were closed.
i can't understand from this exactly what state the discs are.
to the best of my knowledge, when writing to a disc using DCD, it is "open" (i really don't think this is the right terminology) all the time. you can choose to "close" it to UDF or to "close" it to ISO, and then you can't add more data to it (of course you can always erase the disc and then reformat it with DCD are rewrite info...).
i'm assuming your discs were not "closed", that is you just left them as they were when you finished dragNdropping your data files to them.
the best suggestion is to try to find another computer that can read the discs properly. i would suggest trying first a computer on which DCD is
not installed! neither InCD or
any packet-writing software. WinXP should be able to read the files. perhaps the new installation of DCD is somewhat corrupt and interferes. if not winXP, maybe an older windows will be able to read the discs, download the UDF Reader driver from
www.roxio.com , to be able to read UDF discs.
http://www.roxio.com/en/support/roxio_s ... esv4.jhtml, go to the bottom of that page.
if you do find such a computer (that has a burner installed in it),
QUICKLY copy the data off to the hard drive and back up onto other CDs - i would suggest regular CDRs, and definitely
not packet-written but regular burns (Nero, Easy CD Creator etc.).
i was rather hoping Inertia would see this thread and help, i'm sure he will be of much more assistance than i.
@cfitz:
i hit the submit button instead of the preview button, you saw an unfinished verison of the post...
![:o](http://www.cdrlabs.com/forums/images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)