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Reddit mentions of Optical Quantum OQBDR06LT-50 6X 25GB BD-R Single Layer Blu-Ray Recordable Blank Media Logo Top, 50-Disc Spindle

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 5

We found 5 Reddit mentions of Optical Quantum OQBDR06LT-50 6X 25GB BD-R Single Layer Blu-Ray Recordable Blank Media Logo Top, 50-Disc Spindle. Here are the top ones.

Optical Quantum OQBDR06LT-50 6X 25GB BD-R Single Layer Blu-Ray Recordable Blank Media Logo Top, 50-Disc Spindle
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    Features:
  • Blu-ray discs are designed especially to store large HD video and audio files.
  • All Optical Quantum Blu-ray discs are treated with a super hard coat to prevent scratches, resist fingerprints and reduce dust build-up
  • Blu-ray discs use blue-violet laser technology to read and write data.
  • Compatible with LG 6x, 8x, 10x, 12x, 14x / Lite-on 4x, 8x, 12x / PIONEER BDR 203, 205, 206, 206M, 207, 207M (Pioneer 8x, 12x burners) / SONY 2x, 4x, 6x, 8x, 12x / PANASONIC 2x, 4x, 6x, 8x, 12x and all Blu-ray burners with BD-R burning speed 8x or above
  • This single-layer Blu-ray disc offers up to 25 GB of storage space to back-up your video, music, photos and more.
Specs:
Height3.75 inches
Length5 inches
Number of items12
Release dateJune 2011
Size50 Discs
Weight2 pounds
Width5 inches

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Found 5 comments on Optical Quantum OQBDR06LT-50 6X 25GB BD-R Single Layer Blu-Ray Recordable Blank Media Logo Top, 50-Disc Spindle:

u/Fermiac · 28 pointsr/nintendo

The price per gigabyte for flash storage vs. optical disc storage remains as much of a problem today as it was in the N64 era. For a rough idea of the difference, let's look at average consumer prices for a spindle of blu ray discs vs. a high-capacity flash storage device:

http://www.amazon.com/PNY-128GB-MicroSDXC-Memory-P-SDUX128U160G-GE/dp/B00W77C1W4

128GB of flash storage for $30 (an average price of slightly over $0.23/GB), vs.

http://www.amazon.com/Optical-Quantum-OQBDR06LT-50-Blu-Ray-Recordable/dp/B009KXE4VO

about 1.25TB of optical storage for $24 (an average price of <$0.02/GB).

Flash storage remains, to this day, over an order of magnitude more expensive than optical storage per unit of data. Scale that up times hundreds of millions for every game printed and it's easy to see why we're still using discs, and why third parties flocked to Sony in the N64 era. Yes, cartridges have their advantages, but for third parties it's not worth paying literally 10x the price per storage unit - that cuts into their profit margins (especially considering that the size of the average AAA game today is probably something like 30GB minimum).

For that reason alone I sincerely doubt the NX will return to anything like cartridges.

u/arahman81 · 8 pointsr/Games

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009KXE4VO/
50 Blu Rays for $27. And that's the retail price.

Blu-ray drives cost a bit, but blank discs don't cost that much. Definitely nowhere even close to what flash storage with the same capacity costs.

u/feedayeen · 2 pointsr/todayilearned

1GB/hour to store high resolution sound and audio. You can buy a 1TB (1000GB) HDD for less than a hundred. This is enough to store a month worth of video for a single officer. Net cost, 3 dollars a day.

A single DVDR can fit an entire day of work, those cost 25 cents at consumer prices.

Blank Blue-ray disks are even cheaper. 2 of these could record a cop for an entire year

u/Jedecon · 2 pointsr/DataHoarder

A few months late, but in my defense I just found this thread.


I found several. In like two seconds. In fact, when I searched for BD-R" on Amazon, EVERY result I checked, except for one that was labeled LTH was HTL. Note that I am relying on the customer questions & answers to get the ID. It is technically possible that the manufacturers have started selling different discs under the same listings, so if you are worried you can check the ID on the discs before using them.


I think that your confusion comes from the fact that the name of the manufacturer is rarely the brand name.


For example, these Quantum Optical discs have a media ID of cmcmag-ba5. If you look for that ID in the list you will see that they were made by CMC Magnetics Corporation and are an HTL disc.


https://www.amazon.com/Optical-Quantum-OQBDR06LT-50-Blu-Ray-Recordable/dp/B009KXE4VO


These made by ValueDisc have that same media ID, cmcmag-ba5, so we can tell that they are the same disc sold under a different brand.


https://www.amazon.com/Value-Disc-Blu-Ray-Spindle-Taiwan/dp/B00DUHUPCS


These from PLEXDisc have the ID "OTCBDR-002" so they are made by Amethystum Storage Technology Co., Ltd. and are HTL.


https://www.amazon.com/PlexDisc-633-214-Blu-ray-Printable-Recordable/dp/B00IK2OQM8


Those are all cheapo discs. If you want to see some name brand, these Verbatim discs have the media ID VERBAT-IMe. According to that licensee list they are made by Mitsubishi Chemical Media Co., Ltd. and are HTL.


https://www.amazon.com/Verbatim-BD-R-Blu-ray-Recordable-Media/dp/B00GSQ4DBM



A quick side note, if you look at the licencee list, you will see that there are several manufacturers that have never made an LTH disc. If, for example, you buy a Sony disc, you can be sure that it is HTL.

u/powercorruption · 0 pointsr/wiiu

It's not misinformation, dummy. Go pick up a few blu-rays, some PS3 or PS4 games, and some BD-Rs, and you'll notice many of them have rounded edges. This is not unique to Wii U discs, THAT'S misinformed to think that.