1Jan

Dual Layer Dvd Media For Mac

If your objective is to replace the internal drive with a faster/better one, the Pioneer 109 is good. If you're looking for and external, you can make your own or a lot of people offer them with the Pioneer drive. BTW, LaCie doesn't have a particularily good reliability reputation. If your plan is to produce double-sided DVDs for set-top playback, save your money - the level of compatibility is poor, and it's the players' fault, not the burner. The double-sided feature is handy for making data ROM though.

This button is in the upper-left corner of the Outlook app window. Click Help on the File menu. Find this option on the left-hand side, and click or hover over it to see your options. Click Check for Updates on the Help menu. Outlook and Outlook for Mac: Update File Versions. This Wiki page lists the MSI-based Outlook related file versions and updates with release dates and KB articles. View the Microsoft Support Lifecycle information for Outlook 2016 for Mac. Office 2016 for mac updates. Update Office for Mac automatically - Set up Microsoft AutoUpdate Open any Office application such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or Outlook. On the top menu, go to Help > Check for Updates. Under 'How would you like updates to be installed?' , select Automatically Download and Install. Select Check. Office for Mac that comes with an Office 365 subscription is updated on a regular basis to provide new features, security updates, and non-security updates. The following information is primarily intended for IT professionals that are deploying Office for Mac to the users in their organizations.

Dual Layer Burning? Discussion in 'Macintosh Computers' started. What I've been told is that it's capable of burning Dual Layer DVD. However I can't find anything on that. So is it true, can it burn DL? DVD-DAO Media: No My powerbook was made in the 25th week of '05 so it's pretty new. Share Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Email.

I think the success rate on dual layer playback is just fine. Remember 90% of commercial DVDs are dual layer and have been for at least 5 years.

Quickbooks for mac notifications. I burn lots of DLs using a Pioneer 109 in my G5, and they play without any problems on 3 different players in my home, plus various of my kids and a couple of different ones in conference rooms at my church. The only problems I've seen have been on a few players built before around 2000 or earlier. Also, playback on computer software players has occassionally been a problem. They sometimes seem to hang at the layer change on disks that play fine on stand-alone players. One secret to consistently good disks I've found is to keep the total size of the VIDEO_TS folder to around 7.5gb or less.

Inconsistent quality in DL blanks seems to mainly involve bad coatings at the very outside of the disk. Keeping the total file size to this limit meeens that you keep the data and the all-important layer change a little bit in from this edge. What's The Best Dual Layer DVD Burner for My G4 1 Gig Mirror Plate? I have essentially the same computer as you (dual 1.25 GHz Mirror Drive Door [MDD]) and last March installed internally a Plextor 716A dual layer 16x burner. It has worked fine with everything from to EyeTV to the Apple iApps. One of the major reasons I went with Plextor instead of Pioneer was that Pioneer hasn't released a Mac-compatible firmware updater for any of their drives in years. Yes, there are hacks to be found that will allow you to load the PC version of the firmware updaters onto the drive in your Mac if you wish to go that route.

Plextor, on the other hand, regularly releases OS X *AND* OS 9 compatible firmware updaters for their drives, even drives that are no longer their latest and greatest. Firmware version 1.09 for the 716A drive was released just a few days ago, with version 1.08 released last June.

Anyway, just a data point that Pioneer isn't your only choice. You don't really need to do anything with the firmware on a Pioneer drive to get it to work in a Mac. The only thing you need to do is run Patch Burn (freeware) which patches an OS file so that the Mac sees the Pioneer drive as an Apple-authorized Superdrive.

The G-5 Towers all come with the same Pioneer drive as factory installed. The only difference with the Apple version of the firmware on this drive is that a) burning +R disks isn't supported (it is by Pioneer, but Apple doesn't pay the license fees to burn them) and b) - at least through OS 10.3.9 - burning DL disks wasn't supported, even though the Pioneer drive and software do. You don't really need to do anything with the firmware on a Pioneer drive to get it to work in a Mac.

True, the issue isn't with getting the drive to work with our Macs initially. The issue is being able to apply tweaks from the manufacturer to make the drive work better and also maintaining compatibility with newer media as the older media that the drive was designed for becomes increasing difficult find. While I was happy that the upgrade from my factory installed 2X DVD burner gave me a theoretical 16X speed, I did it mostly because it was getting very difficult to find 2X media, nor any media rated for any speed that would even be recognized by the drive to be burned at 2X or even 1X speed. A firmware update would have allowed the drive to at least still function in some capacity. If purchasing a Plextor drive for the same cost as what a Pioneer would have cost gives me an extra six months or year's use out of the drive, than that is free money. It's not like I gave up anything in performance to get that possible extra use, it's just that the regular firmware updates tilted the decision slightly toward Plextor when there were no other factors distingushing between it and other drives.