There’s DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW, and even DVD-ROM! So
what’s the difference between all of these different names,
aren’t all DVDs the same? Well, it’s not quite that simple.
Let’s first start with the most obvious
difference: some have R and some have RW. The “R”
stands for recordable, while the “RW” stands for
rewriteable.
The main difference between DVD-R and DVD-RW, or
DVD+R and DVD+RW is that the R disc formats can only be
written to once, and then it is only readable and can’t be
erased for the rest of its digital life. While RW discs
are can be written to and erased many times, they are both
readable and writeable.
“R” discs are perfect if they are only needed to
be written to once, such as giving some files to a friend or
transferring them between PCs. “RW” discs have their strength in
the ability to be used many times over, which is great for
routine system backups, etc.
Now, onto the difference between DVD-R and DVD+R.
As I just described above, DVD-R & DVD-RW are sister discs, the
difference being one is writeable once, while the other is
writeable multiple times. The same thing is true for DVD+R &
DVD+RW. So the question is, what’s the difference between the
plus and minus?
In order to explain this we must take a trip
back in time. When DVDs were first being developed, there was no
industry standard. Multiple companies were competing to develop
what they hoped would be the dominant form of the future.
The DVD-R DVD+R difference can easily be
summarized by the following:
- The DVD-R/RW standard was developed by Pioneer, and is
used primarily by Apple and Pioneer. These “minus“ discs can
only be written to in one layer on the discs surface. In
addition, this format is supported by the DVD forum, but is
in no way an industry standard. DVD-R/RW discs are cheaper
than the “plus” format.
- The DVD+R/RW format is supported by Philips, Dell, Sony,
HP, and Microsoft. These discs can be written to in multiple
layers, giving them slightly better and more disc storage
than the “minus“ format. Because of this additional
capacity, they are slightly more expensive than “minus“
discs.
A couple final things to clear up is the
difference between DVD-ROM and DVD+RW, or the other DVD formats
I mentioned above. The DVD-ROM drive can only read DVDs, while
the other DVD drives can read and write data to DVDs.
And naturally the DVD+RW CD+RW difference can be
explained by the “DVD” or “CD” prefix. DVDs, on average, can
store up to 4.7 GB of data, while a CD can only store about 700
MB of data, or about 15% of a DVD’s capacity.