![]() Other options available to me for this data burning test: I could make the disk an auto-run and auto-split content by disc capacity. ![]() After entering a password, I then saw a red tinted area where I could drag files that would be encrypted on the disc. While testing this data burning, I could also check out Power2Go's secured disc option, which let me use either 128- or 256-bit encryption. (I know, it's a criminal waste of expensive Blu-ray media, but someone's got to test this stuff for you.) Something odd happened here: Even though the burn dialog reported info on the Blu-ray drive, and even though I started the whole process by clicking "Blu-ray disc," the app still insisted I put media in my DVD drive. I simply took the same files from my DVD movie project and burned them to a 25GB BD-R disc in my LG burner. Blu-ray While I couldn't author and burn a Blu-ray movie and burn, I could at least burn data files (including video files!) to Blu-ray media.
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