Lacie Dvd Driver

  1. Lacie Dvd Driver
  2. Lacie Dvd Drivers For Mac

Lacie free download - LaCie Update Tool, LaCie DiscRecording, LaCie Media, and many more programs. LaCie was kind enough to send us their latest DVD-Writer, the LaCie d2 DVD±RW Double Layer (300757). This drive supports the new Dual Layer DVD+R writing technology, allowing dual layer discs of. Visit us, explore, and be inspired by premium external hard drives, SSDs, and RAID solutions that give you field-proven reliability and bold performance. Trek the globe with Rugged® durability, sprint through projects with Thunderbolt™ speed, and easily connect to the latest USB-C computers.

Lacie Dvd Driver

8X Internal DVD±RW Double Layer. DVD±RW Internal Drive. D2 DVD±RW with CaptyDVD. DVD±RW Internal Drive with LightScribe. DVD±RW Drive Design by F.A. Porsche - FireWire. DVD±RW with LightScribe Design by F.A. D2 DVD±RW with Toast 6 Titanium. DVD±RW Drive Design by F.A.

At a Glance

Expert’s Rating

Pros

  • Fanless operation
  • Bundled LightScribe labeling software
Drive

Our Verdict

Even if you have a Mac with a dual-layer DVD burner, there are good reasons for buying a newer external burner. For example, MacBook users might be fed up with the pokey performance of the MacBook’s built-in 8x burner. A burner like LaCie’s d2 DVD±RW with LightScribe can burn some single-layer DVD±R discs at 20x-a huge boost over 8x speed. However, if you plan on using the d2’s LightScribe feature to etch custom disc labels, be warned that any gains in burning speed will be more than offset by the 15 to 30 minutes needed for etching.

Featuring two FireWire 400 ports and a USB 2.0 port, the d2 leverages the thermal characteristics of the sturdy metal case common to LaCie’s line of d2 peripherals, allowing it to operate without an internal fan. A small AC adapter that plugs into the back supplies power.

Bundled software includes Toast 7 Basic and LaCie’s LightScribe Labeler 1.2 for designing and burning LightScribe labels (you must buy LightScribe CDs or DVDs to use the LightScribe feature). You can also download LaCie’s Remote Burn 1.0 for sharing the d2 across your local network.

In informal testing with 20x compatible DVD-R media, we found the 20x burn to be only 3 percent faster than burning the same media at 16x.

LaCie offers two other models of the d2: a USB-only version for $90, and a FireWire-only version for $170 that includes the full version of Toast Titanium.

Macworld’s buying advice

If you’re looking for the fastest DVD burner for writing at 20x (single-layer) and 12x (dual-layer) speeds using compatible media, the d2 is an excellent choice. Less expensive 20x dual-layer DVD burners are available, but inclusion of the full version of LaCie’s LightScribe Labeler software means you can label to your heart’s content, as well as allow other Macs on your network to burn discs using the drive-both features being unique to the LaCie.

Timed trials

Driver
16x +R Burn6:02
DL Burn19:16
DL Copy 655MB to Hard Drive1:32

Scale = Minutes: Seconds

How we tested: We ran all tests with the FireWire drives connected to a dual-2.66GHz Mac Pro with Mac OS X 10.5.3 installed and 1GB of RAM. We recorded the time it took each drive to burn 8GB of data onto dual-layer DVD+R media using Toast Titanium 8, and also the time it took to burn 4.4GB of data onto 16x DVD+R media. We then timed the copy of a 655MB file from a burned dual-layer DVD to the internal hard drive. —Macworld Lab Testing by James Galbraith and Jerry Jung

Specifications

Drive MechanismSamsung SH-S203N
ConnectorsFireWire 400 (2), 1 USB 2.0
Rated Burn SpeedsDVD-R 20x, DVD+R 20x, DVD+R DL 12x, CD-R 48x
Included SoftwareToast 7 Basic, LaCie DiscRecording, LightScribe Labeler for Mac

[Jeffy Milstead is a former Macworld lab analyst and a writer living in San Francisco.]

Hello,
I'll try to keep this brief. I'm trying to help my brother with a problem that arose today with his Lacie DVD/CD burner. He uses a Mac G4, firewire 800. It quit recognizing media. Same (blank) media as he's always used, but it says that the disk is full. Wouldn't even recognize a movie he had created and burned onto the DVD, using the same burner in question. His computer recognizes the Lacie. He went out and bought a brand new Lacie today and he has the exact same problems, so we're assuming it's his computer and not the Lacie? This is so puzzling, since before today he had no problems. If anyone out there has any suggestions, we'd surely appreciate hearing them.
Thank you in advance.

24' Alum. iMac 3.6 MHz, 5th gen.iPod 30G video, 16 GB iPhone, Mac OS X (10.5.4)

Lacie Dvd Drivers For Mac

Posted on Aug 23, 2008 9:47 PM