![]() ![]() ![]() someone who could do either) makes the right choice because warezing it is tedious. The latter may be true, but if the recording companies can make it hard enough (with only allowing DRM devices to play their content, ect) they can make it so that the customer who is "on the fence" between warezing and buying it (i.e. Why shouldn't they try? Some of you have suggested that the whole process is futile people will always be able to hack it. Is there anything ammoral with this? The BIG content providers who make this stuff want to protect their investment. "I can leave my new movie in my underwear drawer where noone can see it, or I can sell it to you under the condition that you will only be able to view it with devices that cannot easily copy the movie". Is there anything illegal about a content provider (someone who works his ass off to make content that others might enjoy) saying "ok, you have two choices". Maybe someone else already has it works well enough that I haven't looked for updates recently. I'm going to update the programs so they reserve the drive and wait for the recorder to do tray close, if I can figure out how. You have to tell Finder to ignore it, then hit continue in the really annoying "second bad disc dialog". Because you don't start these programs until AFTER you insert the disc, you get Finder's offer to prepare the disc. The one oddity is the drive sharing stuff. All because my FireWire recorder rips better than my SCSI recorder, and I got tired of booting into Linux just to copy. With very little work, I was able to take Schily's newest libraries from cdrtools and drop it in to cdrdao to get that going too. ![]() different, but if you've only got one drive that's no problem either. So that gets you MMC SCSI, FireWire, IDE and USB recorders all in one. The latest alphas of cdrtools have full Mac OS X support-if Apple Disc Burning works, you can use it. I've been using cdrecord and mkisofs on Mac OS X for a while now. ![]()
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