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I don't know what this guy is talking about "disk rot". They are made of plastic which as we all know, takes forever and a week to decay. It does have a thin metal film on the label side which is actually where data is stored to it and is pretty sensitive to whatever touches it. Such as chemicals, dirt, finger prints, sunlight and of course, shoes. The example shown in this guys video caption is the worse case of abuse I have ever seen. Where did this guy store that CD? Under the floor mat of his car?I've recorded some music CD's well over 14 years ago and they have basically lived in a CD changer in the trunk of my car ever since, and they still play perfectly fine.
I've had entire folders (dozens of CD's) die of disk rot. I have had some as bad as the thumbnail for that vid. they were all CD\R's, various brands. My guess is they didn't seal them well on the label side or something plus damper climate. I don't remember ever having it happen with DVD's though. And no, the majority of the CD's that rotted out were only made for backup purposes. Burned then put in the folder for storage. Others are probably still fine to this day that I mis/handled for years. not counting scratches.
That sounds like a manufacturing defect, unless the disk got overheated in some way.
How is her system since I pretty much rebuilt it (KT)? KT's mom's, rebuilt it about a month ago.
replaced the DVD drive(with a working used one)
Yep, usually biggest improvement in a pc is adding a SSD.
Of course it would feel faster. A regular HDD access speed is around 150 to 200 mbps. A SSD usually has around 500 to 600 mbps. Nearly 3 times faster. And a gen3 nvme is usually between 1200 to 3000 mbps. Considerably faster still but once you get above 600mbps, you won't notice as much of a speed boost between ssd and nvme.