OK, yesterday I ended up having to figure out (from scratch) how to write CDs in XP twice, and found two completely different solutions. I seem to recall that easy CD-burning was one of XP's selling points, so I was a bit surprised.
BTW, I think these were both XP Home, but I'm not 100% certain.
The first machine was a Dell with XP preinstalled. We put a blank CD-RW in the drive, and XP gave us an empty 'fake D:\' to copy files into. We copied a few files in there, selected 'write CD' or whatever in the right-click menu, and it burned us a CD. Nice, easy, and fairly quick. I've found a page at Microsoft's site which suggests that this is the default built-in way of burning.
The second machine was an IBM laptop, also with preinstalled XP. This one was completely different - it didn't respond when we put a blank disc in the drive, and trying to copy to D: gave us a 'drive not accessible' error. Eventually we found something called 'IBM DLA' which let us format a CD-RW (which took ages), and appeared to be a Windows component which let us write and delete files on the media like it was a floppy.
Anyway, questions: I assume the Dell wrote an ISO-format CD which can't be appended to, while the IBM wrote a UDF-format CD. Does XP have a built-in way to make UDF-format (i.e. appendable, deletable, etc.) CDs?
I also thought that modern drives (Mt. Rainier) could format CDs as they went along? Can XP do this (by default)?
Simple answers and/or Gurm-style in-depth explanations both welcome.
While I'm here, the IBM owner told me he couldn't access his USB floppy drive unless he removed his account password. His account is an Administrator account, and the only one on the system apart from the disabled Guest account. Any ideas?
BTW, I think these were both XP Home, but I'm not 100% certain.
The first machine was a Dell with XP preinstalled. We put a blank CD-RW in the drive, and XP gave us an empty 'fake D:\' to copy files into. We copied a few files in there, selected 'write CD' or whatever in the right-click menu, and it burned us a CD. Nice, easy, and fairly quick. I've found a page at Microsoft's site which suggests that this is the default built-in way of burning.
The second machine was an IBM laptop, also with preinstalled XP. This one was completely different - it didn't respond when we put a blank disc in the drive, and trying to copy to D: gave us a 'drive not accessible' error. Eventually we found something called 'IBM DLA' which let us format a CD-RW (which took ages), and appeared to be a Windows component which let us write and delete files on the media like it was a floppy.
Anyway, questions: I assume the Dell wrote an ISO-format CD which can't be appended to, while the IBM wrote a UDF-format CD. Does XP have a built-in way to make UDF-format (i.e. appendable, deletable, etc.) CDs?
I also thought that modern drives (Mt. Rainier) could format CDs as they went along? Can XP do this (by default)?
Simple answers and/or Gurm-style in-depth explanations both welcome.
While I'm here, the IBM owner told me he couldn't access his USB floppy drive unless he removed his account password. His account is an Administrator account, and the only one on the system apart from the disabled Guest account. Any ideas?
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