Q. How does Spandex work?
To use Spandex, simply drag in more files than can fit on the media you currently have and hit burn. As long as you aren't trying to burn a file or folder that is larger than the media itself, Disco will allow you to divide the files and folders to multiple discs.
Q. How does Discography work?
By default, Discography indexes all burned discs. To access Discography, choose Discography from the Window menu or hit Command-D. Type in a keyword and Discography will show you related burned files. Click a file to view info on it.
Q. How do Sessions work?
Disco has session support off by default. You can turn them on with the first three checkboxes in the preferences. Session discs can be burned to again. After inserting a session disc into disco, depending on whether or not you have set it to automatically add sessions to appendable discs, you will be able to burn to it like new.
Q. How does Imaging work?
To make an image out of any given files in Disco, simply click the Image button after dragging files onto it. The format used will correspond to that which you have set in the Preferences. To make an ISO out of a disc, simply choose image instead of copy in the Disc Info view.
Q. How does Image Burning work?
To burn an image, simply drag it onto Disco. Instead of showing a list, Disco will present you with a large disc image icon. If you wish to include it as a file on the disc instead of burning the actual volume, choose File Disc from the pop-up menu in the top right.
Q. How does VIDEO_TS Burning work?
If your disc is made up of a VIDEO_TS and/or AUDIO_TS folder, Disco will automatically format the file system and create any necessary folders so that it is readable as a video DVD. It should be noted that not all DVD players support DVDs burned with Disco due to the filesystems used when writing.