Haha I talked to my kids about burning CDs in the way of talking about old tech they've never encountered. They wanted a CD burner after that to try it out, so I found an external USB burner and a cheapo little boom box. They ended up downloading songs from our media server and some stuff from NewGrounds and burning a bunch of mix CDs. It was fun!
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That sounds like a fun activity to do, neat idea.
CT Scan imagery. Apparently medical clinics have finally graduated from faxes to optical media. This was in 2025.
I burned a custom johnny cash cd for my mom using some of her favorites. She played it for about 9 years before accidentally leaving it in the cd player when she sold her old car
Cool stuff. I did that with a USB stick which is objectively better but has less swag (as it is smaller lol)
I had a college sports team reunion and several teammates asked for a copy of a championship game. I still had the digital file, so posted it in a Dropbox thinking that would be easy enough for people whose hobbies don't involve computers.
Nope, I was spending too much time on tech support so offered flash drives with video files.
Nope, still too much for two teammates so after a phone call to understand what tech they had at home and were comfortable with, I burned them each DVDs.
It didn't get that far, but I was prepared to use my library's digital-to-VHS-to-digital workstation to copy them an old-timey VHS tape if the DVDs didn't work. The library even has a stash of never-unwrapped VHS tapes they'll sell you.
I still used CDs, I recently got out all my music CDs again since I setup a new hifi system. But I haven’t burned a cd or dvd in about 15 years. In fact as I came across copies of burned cds in my collection I have gone and bought cheap used copies to replace them.
No idea, it was a long time ago. If I have to guess it would probably was a linux distro, I remember some problems making a bootable usb or booting a laptop from usb so I might ended up burning a cd.
I backup stuff on blurays and DVDs a couple times a year. I also wrote a copy of FreeDOS and some software onto a stack of floppies recently.
I burned a HeXEn dvd last year for modding purposes on the original Xbox. Only thing I've burned in years. Still have a stack of blanks and an external USB disk drive, just in case.
I burned an audio CD just last week. My old Chevy truck has some mid 2000'S radio swapped into it and it doesnt have bluetooth or aux (well, has aux but it's buried in the back of the dash). So I burn a CD once in a while to pop in and enjoy.
Last year a friend of mine was feeling romantic and wanted to give a physical audio disc to a crush. It's not a mixtape but still ...
Once ventoy became a thing i stopped needing optical media. The last one i burned was most likely a linux distro.
I do remember the last bluray i burned was a bunch of roms for Mame and other emulator to mail someone. I think i burned all of maybe 4 bluray discs with that burner, it seemed like a good thing to get when i built the pc in 2010,but i almost never used it.
Burned, was probably a Linux ISO about 15 years ago. I still prefer to buy physical media (CDs and DVDs), just haven't had a need to burn any in a while.
Mine was a live CD of Ubuntu about 3 years ago. It was an older computer and the front USB ports weren't plugged in so no USB drive.
This past summer my GF took a trip to Canada and took her laptop. To preempt any fuckery at the border when she came back into the US I full-disk encrypted it with Veracrypt and I burned an emergency recovery DVD at the time of encryption. She didn't have any trouble crossing back in, but better safe than sorry.
I burned debian onto a cd about ~2 years ago.
Likewise, I burned a Debian install DVD about 6 months ago. A FreeBSD install disk about 9 months ago.
I burned a selection of Expedition 33 songs as a Christmas present for my mother.
Some years ago I burned a quadrophonic bootleg version of Dark Side of the Moon, the original Alan Parsons mix (which sounds much better then the official version) so a friend can listen to it on his 5.1 home cinema.
Besides that I haven't used DVDs in more than a decade, harddrives are cheaper, reliable, always online, run btrfs with realtime checksums and are easy to backup. Besides last time I checked most DVDs don't read anymore.
Install disk for Mint. Older computer and couldn't figure out how else to do the install.
I burned a Blu-ray a few years back just to supplement some of our encrypted Google Drive backups with copies that would be more accessible in case of my demise, or physically grabbable in case of disaster. I know they won't last forever, but if Drive shut down on the same day my local copies failed at least I have an option.
Otherwise, I haven't used physical media in years. I got the 4K LOTR set when it came out and tried to use it, but it ended up being easier to just pirate the rips like anything else.
Copied few cd's for my car stereo last spring. Mp3 player functionality is bit cruddy and I can't be bothered with phoen and aux cable all the time.
I can't even remember the last thing I burned, had to have been over 10 years ago and it was likely install media for some Linux distro. I haven't had a functional audio CD player in a very long time.
I did, however, rip a couple audio discs a few months ago. I was surprised that my USB disc drive still functioned.
edit: just read the other comments and I find it hilarious how almost everyone burned some distro install media
Xubuntu 20.10(?) I think.
I went to college and no longer had any computers with disk drives or a need for one, so I haven’t used many since.
However, I do want to start backing up old VHS tapes my family has onto disks, and burn some of our favorite online movies/shows onto disks so we can watch them if the internet goes down.
Oh wow I have no idea it's been probably at least 10 years since burning a CD. If I had to guess it was some kind of Linux distro maybe systemrescuecd or clonezilla.
I burn exactly one DVD every year.
The school where I teach wants us to deposit all tests done in digital format (I teach programming) at the end of the year on a DVD-RW.
I keep an old USB DVD drive around specifically for this, but I also have some old PCs that I could use. I use k3b to make these discs.
Abstract: I burned a pair of audio CDs three days ago for listening to in my cars. Two (nearly) identical discs, one for each car. I have largely moved away from optical discs but am making an effort to re-embrace them.
Full text: So when I went to build my PC, I wanted a Fractal Meshify 2 Mini case. I built my cousin's PC in one, I wanted one too, but they had apparently been discontinued. I wound up with a Pop Air Mini case instead, which in many ways isn't as nice, but it does feature a pair of 5 1/4" bays hidden behind a magnetic panel at the front of the PSU basement.
One of my little projects was to install one of those multi-format card readers and an old optical drive there, and I got it done a few days ago. I have a USB optical drive, in fact a couple of them, but an internal one is just a nicer thing to deal with. It is my understanding that no one is actually manufacturing those external optical drives anymore; that the ones you see on Amazon with god knows what branding are old laptop drives of whatever spec stuffed into a new case with a USB controller. They're flaky, janky, and flimsy. Plus there's never anywhere to put them; they come with short little cables so they're invariably hard to plug in. So instead I ganked a blu-ray reader/DVD writer drive out of an old Dell I have lying around and installed that, and man is it nicer.
My inaugural project was to make a couple of audio CDs for the car. This project involved little to no piracy; all of the audio came from legitimately purchased CDs that I bought as directly from the band as I could. I want to fund the artists, not the sniveling IP hoarders. So I've got discs now that have my favorite 25 out of ~120 tracks I bought from them in my cars. I ripped the discs to FLACs the second I had them and have been listening to them on my phone, my precious originals safely stored in a CD rack.
I also bought a new spindle of CD-Rs, which is also getting harder to do. The ones I bought have inkjet printable labels. And it just so happens my old inkjet printer has a disc printing feature that I've yet to use. So I tried it out. Getting this particular printer going in Linux for more than basic features is a no-go; CUPS+Gutenprint is available for at least a thousand makes and models of Epson printers including the models above and below mine in the range, but specifically not mine. I chose to take that personally, but in the meantime I have discs to print. Funnily enough the printer can do this without a PC at all; it has a feature specifically for printing JPGs onto discs, and another feature that I have to assume is designed specifically for piracy:
My Epson XP-830 Expression Premium "Small In One" printer has a built-in feature to copy a CD from the scanner bed to the disc tray. That is, put a CD label side down on the scanner glass, put a printable CD-R on the disc tray, and it will figure it out and copy it. I can think of no purpose for that other than to hand out copies of Now That's What I Call Music 7 or Windows Vista Home Premium to all your high school friends. It's useless for things like "File Archives 2011" or "Iron Butterfly Beach Party Mix" but it's a very user friendly counterfeiting workflow.
So mostly I installed this optical drive for reading rather than writing. I can see a future where I replace this drive with an M-disc burner; I keep threatening to start a Youtube channel, and that might be how I archive video footage, but...I don't know.
Probably like 2010, 2011 was my last time? It would have been movies for our dvd player in our bedroom when my (now) wife and I were in University.
I got an iPod Nano for my birthday in the fall of 2005, which brought the burning cd factory that was my computer to a screeching halt. I'd still back up files and stuff using CDs, but it went from like going through a carousel of blanks a month to going through a carousel of blanks in like 3 years, within a very short period of time.
Pretty sure the last one was a bootleg copy of the original Taken movie - a friend had a digital copy and easiest way to play it on the TV was with a DVD
Woulda been while it was still in theaters, circa 2008.
No idea, but probably Ubuntu ~15 years ago
One of my professors in college demanded the class turn in a video production assignment as DVDs.
..... This was in 2018
I was the only one in the class who even had a DVD burner (.... Because I'd used it some years prior for PS2 games piracy and it was still in my storage box)
So the class bought a spindle of DVDs and I spent an afternoon burning everyone's assignments to DVDs.
No idea what would have happened if they didn't have a pet ultranerd like me. Like, did teach expect 'em to go and buy a USB DVD burner just for that?
I maintain a collection of PCs stretching back to the late 90's, so I still regularly burn CDs and DVDs of install media for the ones that can't boot from USB. I should try to get PXE working on my network, but using physical media is fast and convenient for me. I also occasionally burn extra backups to BD-R media.
I have an old car so I burn CDs all the time. After streaming music on shuffle for awhile, I find it refreshing to listen to an album all the way through.
The last CD I burned happened to be legally obtained music off of Bandcamp (a mix of some Trocadero songs).
Though of course a lot of the time, the songs I burn come from other sources.
Burned a handful of DVDs a couple years ago, as backup of photos I took. Not the most convenient, but I actually do like having an album of discs with the dates written on them. Reliving memories this way hits completely different than browsing a directory tree
made a beatles mixtape.. all songs that didn’t get radio play.
tried to do gapless playback but it fucked up.
now i use usb drives or hard drives
It was in like 2006. A dvd rw full of mp3s to play on my portable dvd player that could decode all the useful codecs.
I want to burn some family photos on an M-Disc, I bought a bluray burner and some discs and they wait on the shelf now.
No idea, probably XP.
I use readers but don't burn media anymore, although it's good for long-term storage.
A game for PC engine.
Microsoft exchange install media back in like 2011.
Stock windows ISO, for work.
I dont burn, I rip with MakeMKV, reencode with ffmpeg using a denoise filter and svtav1 with strong compression.
That reduces filesize to about ¼ or less and makes it shareable with anyone, many times.
I love digital media
the last time I burned a disk was probably almost 9 years ago now. It was Ubuntu server because at the time I had the concept of "well I should have a hard install source in case I need to do a full reinstall. I dropped that mentality almost instantly though as I realized that it was better for me to just do backups because there was way too much contents for a DVD and I didn't wanna have to reconfigure if it messed up.
I was doing a bit of cleaning recently and came across a binder/collection of burned DVDs and PS2 games. The kids were young and did a lot of travel by car, which had DVD players strapped to the front head rests. I had a bunch of stuff ready like anime like Inuyasha, Ghibli, Avatar TLA, home videos, VCDs, etc. I even found my old bare bones SATA DVD player that was stripped out of the PC, and a new pack of blank DVDs too. I bought a USB enclosure and the darned thing still works perfectly on my current Linux machine.
About a year ago, burned my family photo collection as yet another backup. Took a stack of DVD-R's to write, but now I also have it in one more format!
About 6-7 years ago. I had a friend who still had some files on a 5-1/4 floppy. I kept an old Win95 PC specifically with a bunch of old drive types and a DVD burner, so I could rescue old files & move them to DVD. Sadly, that PC stopped booting about 2 years ago. I did consider trying to resurrect it, but neither of my current PCs even have a built-in DVD drive, so I think it's safe to say that moving files to DVD isn't moving the files forward enough anymore.
Last CD was probably back in 2011 and was Rise Against - Appeal to Reason and the last game I burned was probably back in 2009 and was Kingdom hearts 2. Have moved on to having “backups” on my HDD or getting them on Steam.


