trying to erase a DVD+RW in Ubuntu 11.10











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I burned a video onto a DVD+RW Windows Vista several years ago. I now want to erase the DVD using Ubuntu 11.10 and install Ubuntu 12.4 Studio onto this disc. I tried to blank the disc, but it didn't work. And now I can't get Windows 7 to read it as well as Ubuntu 11.10. How do I erase this disc for reuse?










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  • Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:52






  • 1




    Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:59










  • How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:05










  • Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:07










  • I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:09

















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I burned a video onto a DVD+RW Windows Vista several years ago. I now want to erase the DVD using Ubuntu 11.10 and install Ubuntu 12.4 Studio onto this disc. I tried to blank the disc, but it didn't work. And now I can't get Windows 7 to read it as well as Ubuntu 11.10. How do I erase this disc for reuse?










share|improve this question
























  • Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:52






  • 1




    Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:59










  • How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:05










  • Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:07










  • I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:09















up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I burned a video onto a DVD+RW Windows Vista several years ago. I now want to erase the DVD using Ubuntu 11.10 and install Ubuntu 12.4 Studio onto this disc. I tried to blank the disc, but it didn't work. And now I can't get Windows 7 to read it as well as Ubuntu 11.10. How do I erase this disc for reuse?










share|improve this question















I burned a video onto a DVD+RW Windows Vista several years ago. I now want to erase the DVD using Ubuntu 11.10 and install Ubuntu 12.4 Studio onto this disc. I tried to blank the disc, but it didn't work. And now I can't get Windows 7 to read it as well as Ubuntu 11.10. How do I erase this disc for reuse?







dvd






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edited Oct 17 '13 at 21:00









user68186

15.1k84563




15.1k84563










asked Oct 17 '13 at 20:43









user203783

1




1












  • Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:52






  • 1




    Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:59










  • How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:05










  • Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:07










  • I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:09




















  • Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:52






  • 1




    Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 20:59










  • How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:05










  • Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
    – user203783
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:07










  • I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
    – user68186
    Oct 17 '13 at 21:09


















Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 20:52




Yes, sorry I mistyped the question. The DVD is a rewritable DVD+RW disc. You're supposed to be able to rewrite it many times. I've done this many times in Windows. And no, I'm not a fan of Windows. I'm transitioning to using Linux as my main OS. Hope this clears this up.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 20:52




1




1




Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
– user68186
Oct 17 '13 at 20:59




Please edit the original question, rather than indicating corrections in comments.
– user68186
Oct 17 '13 at 20:59












How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 21:05




How does one edit their question? I'm new to using the Ask Ubuntu forums, but have often searched them and found many useful solutions and answers. Also, I see that the term DVD+RW is in my question remarks. I thought that RW meant rewritable.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 21:05












Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 21:07




Sorry. Just saw the edit link. But I'm not sure why my question needs editing.
– user203783
Oct 17 '13 at 21:07












I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
– user68186
Oct 17 '13 at 21:09






I have edited and corrected the typo. You had typed DVD+R, while you intended to type DVD+RW. So now you don't need to edit it any more. :) In any case, your question may be deemed off topic as Ubuntu 11.10 has reached its end of life and is not supported anymore. It is quite possible the DVD+RW is corrupted.
– user68186
Oct 17 '13 at 21:09












2 Answers
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Unless the disc is specifically meant to be reused, burned data on DVDs tends to be more or less permanent. It's possible to burn new files onto it, but you'd really be better off just buying a new DVD for the task. You probably won't be able to effectively use that one as an Ubuntu LiveCD.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    -1
    down vote













    I use "brasero". On the "Tools" menu, select "Blank ...". A "Disc Blanking" dialog box will open. Click on "Blank".



    On some drives, you can use



    sudo cdrecord dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast


    That does not work for my drive.






    share|improve this answer





















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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
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      up vote
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      down vote













      Unless the disc is specifically meant to be reused, burned data on DVDs tends to be more or less permanent. It's possible to burn new files onto it, but you'd really be better off just buying a new DVD for the task. You probably won't be able to effectively use that one as an Ubuntu LiveCD.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        0
        down vote













        Unless the disc is specifically meant to be reused, burned data on DVDs tends to be more or less permanent. It's possible to burn new files onto it, but you'd really be better off just buying a new DVD for the task. You probably won't be able to effectively use that one as an Ubuntu LiveCD.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          0
          down vote










          up vote
          0
          down vote









          Unless the disc is specifically meant to be reused, burned data on DVDs tends to be more or less permanent. It's possible to burn new files onto it, but you'd really be better off just buying a new DVD for the task. You probably won't be able to effectively use that one as an Ubuntu LiveCD.






          share|improve this answer












          Unless the disc is specifically meant to be reused, burned data on DVDs tends to be more or less permanent. It's possible to burn new files onto it, but you'd really be better off just buying a new DVD for the task. You probably won't be able to effectively use that one as an Ubuntu LiveCD.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Oct 17 '13 at 20:49









          Sylan

          406




          406
























              up vote
              -1
              down vote













              I use "brasero". On the "Tools" menu, select "Blank ...". A "Disc Blanking" dialog box will open. Click on "Blank".



              On some drives, you can use



              sudo cdrecord dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast


              That does not work for my drive.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                -1
                down vote













                I use "brasero". On the "Tools" menu, select "Blank ...". A "Disc Blanking" dialog box will open. Click on "Blank".



                On some drives, you can use



                sudo cdrecord dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast


                That does not work for my drive.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote









                  I use "brasero". On the "Tools" menu, select "Blank ...". A "Disc Blanking" dialog box will open. Click on "Blank".



                  On some drives, you can use



                  sudo cdrecord dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast


                  That does not work for my drive.






                  share|improve this answer












                  I use "brasero". On the "Tools" menu, select "Blank ...". A "Disc Blanking" dialog box will open. Click on "Blank".



                  On some drives, you can use



                  sudo cdrecord dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast


                  That does not work for my drive.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Dec 1 at 15:44









                  Scott Butler

                  11




                  11






























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