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Was the wine good?
A California chardonnay - oaky.
It went well with the oak burning in the fireplace . . .
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As for microwaving or actual burning of CDs, there is the problem of toxic fumes from the plastic and metals involved. Not sure I would want to do it very frequently or for large numbers.
CDs made by Taiyo Yuden in Japan are among the highest quality CDs available. They are made with cyanine dyes.
Many other quality CDs are made with pthalocyanine dyes.
Cyanine. Pthalocyanine. I dunno, but -
A lot of materials which include cyanide (does this apply to cyanine? any chemists out there?) incorporated within said materials give off cyanide gas when burned. Another reason to get out of a burning building as quickly as possible - "smoke inhalation" can mean cyanide inhalation. Also airplanes - people who died in plane fires in the past may have died of smoke inhalation from the cyanide given off by burning seat cushions rather than from the flames. Which brings us to -
Whether or not burning CDs give off cyanide gas, I do not know - but it sure would be interesting if someone here would do the experiment to find out. If he - or if his survivors - would post the results to this bulletin board, I would be most appreciative.
As for me - I burn CDs (as in, "burn in the fireplace") only in a well ventilated situation with a fireplace with a very good draft - one window in the room open to maximize through ventilation - central heating turned off to avoid suction of any fumes into the forced air intake vents - and I go ahead and leave the room for the duration.
Just a wee bit cautious, mind you. CDs burn surprisingly slowly - and the black smoke that CDs give off is really, really nasty looking. Just looking at it makes you want to be somewhere else right now - kinda the same feeling you get as when you say the wrong thing to a high ranking motorcycle gang member . . .
Oh - one more note - CDs are not archival media. Do not use them as such.
I know a girl currently getting her Ph.D in library IT. Gets to defend her thesis soon. :-) She talks with university library archivists all the time - the kind of people who keep maps around for centuries. You know - picky types. Sacred duty and all that. According to her, writable CDs (CDRs) are specifically considered to NOT be archival material in libraries - CDRs are expected to last five or so years.
Writable DVDs are much worse - she just laughed. They do not touch them.
The most anguished CD failures that I have heard have been professional photographers who have gone digital and have lost important photographs to their CD "archives."
"Why the long face?" I reassure them: "you can go back into that war zone and just take the same photograph you took before right over again . . ."
Ya gotta move fast, sometimes.
Happy archiving -
Epaminondas
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What do the simple folk do?
They burn CDs 'til they turn blue . . .
- apologies to L and L -