Eric the Viking
Nordic Pine
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2020
- Messages
- 897
- Reaction score
- 351
I've just been setting up a new PC. It's running Linux Mint, and since it has a flashy new graphics card, etc, I thought I'd see how some vintage games looked.
So I pulled out my box of Quake software, including several home-made CDs. All of them read perfectly, including one Dysan (blue aniline dye) and several HP "Surestore CD-R" disks (light green/gold). I noticed a date I'd written on one - 1996!
I think at the time I was using a (very expensive) Plextor CD-writer, but that was because it was one of the few that could properly master CDs themselves, not because it was particularly good at actual writing. There wasn't anything special about the actual discs, although they've been in a box for many years so not exposed to light.
Anyway,I'm very pleasantly surprised by the longevity. And I got Quake to run, too.
E.
So I pulled out my box of Quake software, including several home-made CDs. All of them read perfectly, including one Dysan (blue aniline dye) and several HP "Surestore CD-R" disks (light green/gold). I noticed a date I'd written on one - 1996!
I think at the time I was using a (very expensive) Plextor CD-writer, but that was because it was one of the few that could properly master CDs themselves, not because it was particularly good at actual writing. There wasn't anything special about the actual discs, although they've been in a box for many years so not exposed to light.
Anyway,I'm very pleasantly surprised by the longevity. And I got Quake to run, too.
E.