OK! Let's burn some disks!
Step by step instructions follow. You might want to wait a few hours so others can read and correct any errors in these instructions...
1. Determine the space available on the disk you will be burning to. Roughly, CD = 600MB, DVD-R = 4.7GB, Dual Layer DVD = 8.6GB, Apple ][ floppy = 1.44MB.
2. Click on any part of the Desktop to access the Finder.
3. Click on
or open a new Finder window (command-N, or "New Finder Window" in the File menu)
4. In the File menu, select the "New Burn Folder."
5. A new item called "Burn Folder.fpbf" will be created and the name will be highlighted ready for you to type in a name. Do not over-write the ".fpbf" part of the name if you're using Tiger or earlier X versions.
6. Drag any files you want into the newly named folder.
It may help to open another Finder window.
Note the "Minimum disc size" in the bottom part of the burn folder. Be sure it does not exceed the space available on the disks you'll be using.
FYI, when you drag a file into this folder, it will be displayed as an alias. The original file(s) will not be moved or duplicated, but the OS will now know where each file is.
7. When you have moved as many files as will fit on the disk or you have no more to burn, you are ready to do the actual burning. There are a couple of ways to do this:
1. Double-click the folder and then click the "Burn" button on the right-hand top of the window.
2. Control-click the folder and use the "Burn Folder" in the contextual menu.
3. Click the 'burn' icon in the at the top of the window holding the burn folder.
8. You will be presented with a window showing what kind of disk will be required to hold the contents of the folder.
1. If you have a disk of that size or greater, insert it into the disk drive and watch the indicater move as the disk is initialized, files are written and then 'finalized.' You're finished with that disk, be sure to label it so you'll know what's on it.
2. If your disks are too small (in space available) simply remove some of the files in the burn folder until the "Minimum disc size" indicates something less than you disks capacity. Now return to step 8.1 and burn your disk.
9. If you have more files to burn, you have two options:
1. Simply move all the file names in the current burn folder to the trash and return to step 7. Remember, these are not the actual files, they're only little files that tell the OS where the real ones are.
2. Create a new burn folder by returning to step 2 above
Now that you've burned/stored all your valuable files, there's no longer any need to keep them on your internal hard drive. You can erase them by moving them to the trash can, the space they take up will become available for new stuff after the trash can is emptied.