madikngay Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 sir jack the facts were in a previous post....it was answered already ...thanks anyway Quote Link to comment
scooby91 Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 Is anyone familiar with the PIATCO case? - Is there any law/regulation that prohibits the govt from taking-over operations of NAI-3?- what are the loophole sof our BOT Law? (build operate transfer) Many thanks... Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 If it only has problems with secure webpages, it may either be some form of malware or a corrupted file that is used for handling online encryption and the like. Since it is the same with both IE and Firefox, we could safely assume that the problem itself is either with the ISP or the underlying communication protocols on your machine. :headsetsmiley: Unfortunately, there is still insufficient data to ascertain what the problem is. If it's the last, there may be no other solution but to format your computer since it means your OS just tripped and damaged itself. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> All is fine now.. Ijust got back home and i only checked my pc now and its all normal.. Pag on ko ng pc the modem for my broadband blinked and nawala ung (ppoe/act light) for a while tapos pag balik my net is all working.. I still dont know what happened though.. But one things for sure, its ISP related..Wala naman before it got busted yesterday I was just downloading torrents and I left my pc afk; Pag balik ko and surfed biglang di na gumana ung browsing for certain sites..And whats werid was ung mga sites na ayaw mag load eh random, minsan nagloload minsan hinde..Anyway, I hope this happenes again as its really frustrating and dont know the solution if ever it does.. Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 how about have you already checked the privacy, security settings on the ie options.... or baka naman naka-high level yung internet security mo.... yung lang kasi ang nag-cacause ng issue sa mga cust ko ..... :) <{POST_SNAPBACK}> hinde naman po.. tama nga ISP related still dont know what caused it though Quote Link to comment
momo_aswang Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 ei guys, i have 2 hard disk, cdrw,cdp. the thing is, i want to add another hard disk and a dvd writer , but how? help pls..<{POST_SNAPBACK}>Bili po kayo nang USB 5.25" hard drive enclosure. Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 tanong lang poano po difference ng DVD-R sa DVD+R ? and useful ba ang DVD writer na may Dual Layer? kasi not all drives can read this diba and mga dvd players di rin ata.. Quote Link to comment
S\\m//T Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 tanong lang poano po difference ng DVD-R sa DVD+R ? and useful ba ang DVD writer na may Dual Layer? kasi not all drives can read this diba and mga dvd players di rin ata.. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> DVD Recorders: The Difference Between DVD-R and DVD+R? The Functional Differences According to the claims of the DVD Alliance, using a DVD+R/+RW recorder will let you do the following: 1. Instantly eject without having to wait for finalized formatting. 2. Ability to record one DVD disc partially on PC and partially on television. 3. Background formatting: while the disc is being formatted, you can simultaneously record on already-formatted portions of the same disc. 4. Enhanced ability to edit filenames, movie and song titles, and playlists. 5. 100% compatibility with all other DVD players, while still enjoying these extra recording features. Quote Link to comment
deus Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 DVD+R media is for audio-video recording that can be played by all commercial video player. DVD-R is for anything but some commercial video player may not recognize this type of media. If data for PC, any DVD media type will do. Dual Layer was made to counter piracy. it can hold 2X the capacity of a standard DVD. Its just like having 2 layers to burn data into. It still costly to buy (P350.00) for a single DVD-DL whilst you can get the same capacity with 2 standard DVDs for the cost of P20.00 each. Quote Link to comment
S\\m//T Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 There appears to be no physical, and little functional, difference between the DVD-R/-RW discs and the DVD+R/+RW discs. The DVD-R ("dash” R) and -RW media are officially approved by the group called DVD Forum, and the DVD+R ("plus” R) and +RW are not. The DVD+R/+RW media are supported by the DVD+RW Alliance. The main difference seems to lie in the DVDs' built-in defects management, the way they can be formatted and, of course, their price. Did you know?The private format known as DVD-Slim is not approved by the DVD Forum. The format is not in compliance with any approved DVD formats. Confusing World of DVD Media Definition: DVD - started as Digital Video Disc, now means Digital Versatile Disc DVD media can hold up to 13 times the information of a standard CD, on one side! A DVD looks just like a CD. It is 120mm in diameter, and 1.2mm (comprised of two polycarbonate substrates, 0.6mm each) in thickness. It can be single or double sided. Furthermore, each side may contain a second layer to increase the disc's storage capacity. Common DVD storage capacities are:4.7GB (single sided/single layer) 9.4GB (double sided/1 layer)8.5GB (single sided/dual layer)17.1GB (double sided/dual layer) Did you know?A dual layer DVD can provide up to 4 hours of the highest quality audio and video on a single side of the disc. Perhaps you would like to produce and burn your own videos, and be able to play them in most set-top DVD players. Therefore, before head out you buy a DVD recorder, ask yourself two questions:1) What level of compatibility are you looking for? 2) What will be the best format of recordable DVD media to make that happen? The first question is usually easy to answer - you want a media format that can be read by another computer or will play in a majority of set-top DVD players. The answer to the second question can be rather confusing.There are two main types of recordable DVDs but their similar naming and near identical features cause a fair deal of confusion. Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 (edited) any brands the you guys suggest? i know lite-on is kinda good..want replace my old cdr with a dvdr soon but since im on a budget ; i would just buy generic blank dvdr discs, wont that reduce the quality of the dvd writer? dapat ba ung branded blank discs lang which are quite more expensive than the generic ones? and, i guess its better to go dual layer although i dont think most dvd players support it yet..bad thing is my dvd player doesnt support xvid or divxi just plan to encode the VCDs/DVD's to MPEG and burn em straight to a DVD Edited February 2, 2006 by kUrTsKY Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 DVD+R media is for audio-video recording that can be played by all commercial video player. DVD-R is for anything but some commercial video player may not recognize this type of media. If data for PC, any DVD media type will do. Dual Layer was made to counter piracy. it can hold 2X the capacity of a standard DVD. Its just like having 2 layers to burn data into. It still costly to buy (P350.00) for a single DVD-DL whilst you can get the same capacity with 2 standard DVDs for the cost of P20.00 each.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> i see..but im sure there would be cheap generic DL DVDr's out there that would costs a little more than the single layered ones.. problem with dual layer is it would take too long to burn Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 (edited) There appears to be no physical, and little functional, difference between the DVD-R/-RW discs and the DVD+R/+RW discs. The DVD-R ("dash” R) and -RW media are officially approved by the group called DVD Forum, and the DVD+R ("plus” R) and +RW are not. The DVD+R/+RW media are supported by the DVD+RW Alliance. The main difference seems to lie in the DVDs' built-in defects management, the way they can be formatted and, of course, their price. Did you know?The private format known as DVD-Slim is not approved by the DVD Forum. The format is not in compliance with any approved DVD formats. Confusing World of DVD Media Definition: DVD - started as Digital Video Disc, now means Digital Versatile Disc DVD media can hold up to 13 times the information of a standard CD, on one side! A DVD looks just like a CD. It is 120mm in diameter, and 1.2mm (comprised of two polycarbonate substrates, 0.6mm each) in thickness. It can be single or double sided. Furthermore, each side may contain a second layer to increase the disc's storage capacity. Common DVD storage capacities are:4.7GB (single sided/single layer) 9.4GB (double sided/1 layer)8.5GB (single sided/dual layer)17.1GB (double sided/dual layer) Did you know?A dual layer DVD can provide up to 4 hours of the highest quality audio and video on a single side of the disc. Perhaps you would like to produce and burn your own videos, and be able to play them in most set-top DVD players. Therefore, before head out you buy a DVD recorder, ask yourself two questions:1) What level of compatibility are you looking for? 2) What will be the best format of recordable DVD media to make that happen? The first question is usually easy to answer - you want a media format that can be read by another computer or will play in a majority of set-top DVD players. The answer to the second question can be rather confusing.There are two main types of recordable DVDs but their similar naming and near identical features cause a fair deal of confusion.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> intrestingwhen i thought 8.5 Gig was the max storage a DVD could have thinking that its dual layer..but i havent seen any double sided/dual layer 17.1 GB DVDr's yet and i dont think there are any DVD burners that could burn or DVD rom drives that could read such discs..perhaps we should all wait till the DL dVDs go down in price.. it kinda confusing if you think of it right? also,im still thinkin about it1.) price2.) compatibility ( i would want a recorder that would be useful in the days,months and years to come..perhaps a DL capable drive is good. because DL is already becoming quite popular nowadays although media is still quite expensive..problem is wether media I burn on DVDr's (DL or not) would play on my DVD player.. Unless I would spend extra cash to get a new set top DVD player ) Edited February 2, 2006 by kUrTsKY Quote Link to comment
deus Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 i see..but im sure there would be cheap generic DL DVDr's out there that would costs a little more than the single layered ones.. problem with dual layer is it would take too long to burn<{POST_SNAPBACK}> sa ngayon, wala pa ako nakikitang generic na DVD-DL. I go for HP (P20 at CDR King Greenhills). Burner, Lite-on ok na. at least yung 1693S model with 2 bezel, dual layer capable na to. :thumbsupsmiley: I've not tried burning into a DVD-DL but sa standard DVD my katagalan yung pag burn. I use only 6X speed. Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 sa ngayon, wala pa ako nakikitang generic na DVD-DL. I go for HP (P20 at CDR King Greenhills). Burner, Lite-on ok na. at least yung 1693S model with 2 bezel, dual layer capable na to. :thumbsupsmiley: I've not tried burning into a DVD-DL but sa standard DVD my katagalan yung pag burn. I use only 6X speed.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> diba pag DVDr 16x ung max speed?would it take like almos same speed as CDR?just curious lang coz i read somewhere on the net an average 4Gig DVDr single layer movie would take about 10-15 minutes ot burn and does the speed ofo the PC processor speed up the burning process? Quote Link to comment
S\\m//T Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 (edited) intrestingwhen i thought 8.5 Gig was the max storage a DVD could have thinking that its dual layer..but i havent seen any double sided/dual layer 17.1 GB DVDr's yet and i dont think there are any DVD burners that could burn or DVD rom drives that could read such discs..perhaps we should all wait till the DL dVDs go down in price.. it kinda confusing if you think of it right? also,im still thinkin about it1.) price2.) compatibility ( i would want a recorder that would be useful in the days,months and years to come..perhaps a DL capable drive is good. because DL is already becoming quite popular nowadays although media is still quite expensive..problem is wether media I burn on DVDr's (DL or not) would play on my DVD player.. Unless I would spend extra cash to get a new set top DVD player ) <{POST_SNAPBACK}> DUAL-LAYER DVDS with 17.1 GB capacity hasn't landed in the Philippines yet or should I say, it's not yet commonly used among DVD users since a lot of DVD players here doesn't support that type of DVD discs and the burner ??? It's still rare here... :thumbsdownsmiley: Edited February 2, 2006 by Silvertide Quote Link to comment
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