M-Disc

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(Created page with "{{FormatInfo |formattype=physical |subcat=Optical Discs |subcat2=DVD }} '''M-Disc''' is a variety of optical disc designed for long-term archival storage, supposedly certi...")
 
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'''[[M-Disc]]''' is a variety of optical disc designed for long-term archival storage, supposedly certified to last 1000 years, though one would have to actually wait 1000 years to be sure of the validity of this claim. The original version of this was a variety of [[DVD]], in a sufficiently compatible format to be able to be read by any normal DVD drive, though writing to it takes a special "M-Disc ready" drive. A new variety in 2013 supports [[BluRay disc]] format.
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'''M-Disc''' is a variety of optical disc designed for long-term archival storage, supposedly certified to last 1000 years, though one would have to actually wait 1000 years to be sure of the validity of this claim. The original version of this was a variety of [[DVD]], in a sufficiently compatible format to be able to be read by any normal DVD drive, though writing to it takes a special "M-Disc ready" drive. A new variety in 2013 supports [[BluRay disc]] format.
  
 
M-Discs use higher-powered lasers to carve pits in a metallic layer, rather than simply altering a dye layer subject to fading as normal optical discs do.
 
M-Discs use higher-powered lasers to carve pits in a metallic layer, rather than simply altering a dye layer subject to fading as normal optical discs do.

Revision as of 12:31, 22 April 2014

File Format
Name M-Disc
Ontology

M-Disc is a variety of optical disc designed for long-term archival storage, supposedly certified to last 1000 years, though one would have to actually wait 1000 years to be sure of the validity of this claim. The original version of this was a variety of DVD, in a sufficiently compatible format to be able to be read by any normal DVD drive, though writing to it takes a special "M-Disc ready" drive. A new variety in 2013 supports BluRay disc format.

M-Discs use higher-powered lasers to carve pits in a metallic layer, rather than simply altering a dye layer subject to fading as normal optical discs do.

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