I would love to use DVDA for the burning step as well as all the other steps in DVD creation. But from what I can tell, the burn operation in DVDA has no capability of doing a validation after burn. I've been using Nero for burning. In any typical burn scenario, I almost always end up with one or two DVDs that fail validation. That's fine when I use Nero... I KNOW it's bad, pitch it, and burn another one.
Now one could argue that the percentage of fallout could go up or down based on the quality of raw stock. But I doubt it will ever go to zero. And I just don't want to risk sending a bad DVD to the customer simply because the burning program (i.e. DVDA) could not do a validation step.
Am I missing something? Is there a way to make DVDA go back and validate a burn? Does everybody that burns with DVDA simply cross their fingers and blindly assume that every DVD copy that was burned was 100% successfully? Or should I just forget using DVDA for burning?
Thanks.
Jerry
Now one could argue that the percentage of fallout could go up or down based on the quality of raw stock. But I doubt it will ever go to zero. And I just don't want to risk sending a bad DVD to the customer simply because the burning program (i.e. DVDA) could not do a validation step.
Am I missing something? Is there a way to make DVDA go back and validate a burn? Does everybody that burns with DVDA simply cross their fingers and blindly assume that every DVD copy that was burned was 100% successfully? Or should I just forget using DVDA for burning?
Thanks.
Jerry