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DESCRIPTION
BurnToDisc is an Aperture Plug-In that simplifies the process of exporting your images and burning them to DVDs and CDs for sharing, archiving or off-site storage. Disc names are automatically generated from user-defined elements such as disc number, image number, export date and project name. For each exported image, you can specify multiple image sizes, multiple image formats and on-disc folder placement for the images. To allow for varying workflow scenarios, any number of named export configurations can be saved, and then later recalled for use.
WHAT'S NEW
Version 2.0.1: Fixed a bug that could stop the export panel from being displayed when running on MacOS 10.4 Tiger. Version 2.0:
  • Export session configurations are now saved and accessed as named export configuration templates.
  • Images can now be exported in multiple formats, sizes and custom file names.
  • Exported images can now be placed in user-definable folder hierarchies on disc.
  • Disc, folder and image naming tokens are now accessed via a single action button instead of multiple token buttons.
  • The automatic collection of Export Session name suggestions and disc count estimations are controlled by preferences.
  • The burn progress panel is now not shown by default.
REQUIREMENTS
G4 or better, Mac OS X 10.4 or later, Aperture 1.5 or later.


SCREENSHOT

Developer:Blue Room Software
Downloads:1,655
  - Version d/l:255
Multimedia & Design:Author Tools
License:Demo
Date:20 Mar 2009
Platform:PPC/Intel
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    BurnToDisc User Reviews (2 posts)Write A Review
    sort: smiles | time
    Mar 20 2009
    *....

    MACVAULT  This is insanely expensive for what it does. Looking forward to the next Aperture update that hopefully includes most of what this does. I'd buy it if it were $5, but not $50.  
    (Version 2.0.1)

    praisebury
    -1
    [ Reply ]
    Aug 16 2008

    SUBSCRIBER3  a recent article in Science News reads in part:

    "The bottom line: Don’t store files on DVDs, I learned, unless you’re prepared to dump the disks every three months and create new ones from your original source files.

    "CDs will store your digital pix longer — maybe a year.

    "Your computer’s hard drive: That’s the safest place to store digital files that matter. There the bits and bytes that define a snapshot of Mt. Everest, your baby at 6 hours of age, or grandpa's prize-winning radish may survive unscathed for three years or more. I picked up these depressing tidbits from David C. Tarrant of the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton, England."

    http://sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/33277/title/Science_%2B_the_Public__Family_Snaps_in_Peril  
    (Version 1.0.3)

    praisebury
    0
    [ 2 Replies - Reply ]
    Replies:
    Feb 7 2009

    DP-G4-450GUY  What an idiotic article.

    Hard to believe that tripe was published in what is purportedly a 'science' mag.  
    (Version 2.0b1)

    praisebury
    +1
    Mar 1 2009

    ROB.H  Maybe the article was published in April 1st? ;-)

    Have to say, I've got data on CDs and DVDs that I burned several years ago and it's still fine.   
    (Version 2.0)

    praisebury
    0