I just wondered what the secret to creating CDs that are compatable with other CD-ROMs/CD-RWs is. If I create a CD on my CD-RW I want it to be able to be read by as many other CD-ROM/CD-RW devices as possible.
I am guessing that the following will have a bearing on this:
1. CD-RW I use to burn the CD (some produce more compatible CDs than others ??);
2. the quality of media used (though I believe the most important thing is to match the media to the burner);
3. burn speed.
1. Is this true? Or is matching the media to the burner more important (2.)?
3. I thought by burning at a low speed (4x) I would increase compatability - but after burning a CD on my Benq 32x10x40x at this speed a CD-ROM and CD-RW on another PC can't read the CD at all. When I burn at 32x they can read it - but with errors (can't read some files properly).
It is because I am experiencing these problems with my Benq that I am asking this question. And I would be only to happy to ditch it for a better CD-RW if necessary.