Submitted by emma in yourpersonalblog
actually it's a combo cd/dvd/hd dvd/blu-ray drive, but calling it an hd dvd drive is just funnier i think
anyway it's like the best quality of life improvement i've made to my computer since i decided i'd had enough of intel graphics. the dvd drive i had in it previously it was loud, kept seeking at random times, and had weird intermittent problems playing discs which could only be solved by rebooting. it also kept retracting the fucking tray while i was fiddling with swapping discs, which i thought was just windows being shit with disc drives nowadays, but apparently it's a firmware issue with the drive itself.
the new drive is like a proper name brand one, and it just has the vibe of being a way better quality product. which, seeing as it's around 15 years old and probably was really fucking expensive back in the day, you'd hope it would be. the 'clunk' sound it makes when it retracts the tray is just absolute perfection, it's just so elegant compared to the sad mutters of the old drive. also the drive is totally silent, or at least not audible over my heat pump, so i probably won't have to get up and turn my computer off because the drive randomly decided to spin up at 3 am
most importantly, the previous owner didn't remove the plastic film on the tray, so i got to do that myself.
back in the day, i used to just order the cheapest drive with the features i wanted (lightscribe, which i never actually used once), because i figured they were all the same. turns out that isn't the case. so if you're one of those nutters who uses discs in your computer in 2023, i highly recommend getting a drive of good quality. idk if any of the newer ones qualify, it seems to me they've been cost-reduced to shit.
devtesla wrote (edited )
Anything to do with physical media tends to get so much worse over time, it's really depressing. Like there's something of a resurgence of records and cassettes and you can't get a decent one of either of those, they just stopped making them. So yeah probably happening with disks too, at least ones for computers