On 2015-06-26, gottl...@nyu.edu <gottl...@nyu.edu> wrote: > My new (dell E7450) laptop will be a slimline with no internal optical > drive. So I want to purchase an external optical drive. My first > thought was to get a drive that is both > a blue ray READER and > a dvd writer
AFAIK, none of my current computers have (or ever have had) blue ray drives. I'm 100% sure that 3 of them don't, but it's possible my laptop can read blue ray disks. Even the DVD drives get used very rarely these days. I used to install OSes from optical disks, and therefor I used to burn the occasional Fedora/Ubuntu DVD or systemrescuecd CD. But, I use USB flash drives for that these days[1]. The optical drives my computers _do_ have don't seem to be very reliable. Not that you'd expect much from anything with a motor and lots of of moving parts for which you paid $15. The only reason I can think of for having a BR drive is so you can watch BR movies that Netflix mails you[2]. [1] Despite all steps explained in the blog posts on how to build a bootable flash drive based on an ISO image, I've found that for everything except systemrescuecd, all I have ever had do is: dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdd bs=64k [2] I still get plain old DVDs -- it turns out that blue ray doesn't improve the characters, plot, writing, direction, cinematography, editting, or anything that else matters about movies. A Michael Bay movie on blue ray is still a Michael Bay movie. -- Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! I feel partially at hydrogenated! gmail.com