Blueray Burner For Mac

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Blueray Burner For Mac 5,0/5 959 votes

Click to expand.Just to actually answer the question asked. Publisher for mac free trial. I've got a 10.6.1 Hackintosh (Gigabyte) with the LG WH10LS30 (SATA) that burns SL/DL Blu-Ray discs. I bought one DL Blu-Ray for $14 (Fry's) but I did not burn it yet. I'm using Toast 10.0.8, and have created (successfully) blu-ray movies and backup DVD's.

Blueray Burner For Mac

There aren’t many choices for Blu-ray burning software for Mac users. Of the products we reviewed, Express Burn was the best. It’s not just a Blu-ray burner, it’s a whole suite of optical disc utilities. Leawo Blu-ray Creator for Mac is a powerful Blu-ray burning software on Mac, with this professional Blu-ray Creator Mac you can easily create Blu-ray/DVD disc from any video sources. Looking for the best Blu-ray, DVD and CD burner? Pioneer makes high quality Blu-ray, DVD and CD burners, both internal and USB. Choose an internal SATA drive if you need 15x performance, or a slim USB drive if you need portability.

Blu Ray Drive For Mac

Burning takes a VERY long time as my media is crap however, I think the prices are dropping enough as the LG drive is $109 @ () As far as playing the blu-ray discs on the mac, the drive will not, but I think with the correct software it might work (VLC???). Cannot print pdf file. I also bought 25 SL Blu-Ray Discs for $24.99 @ Fry's. They had a $19.99 - 25pk, but couldn't find them (go figure). I would say that prices are just right for us 'early adopters' and since we are not talking about GB, but TB serious HD Movie buffs or DSLR consumers need to start thinking about making the Blu-Ray upgrade. Heck, my old DVD Burner needed an upgrade and for $100 bucks replacing it with a faster DVD Burner + Blu-Ray Burner was a no-brainer.

External Blu Ray Burner

One of Steve Jobs’s most memorable comments may be the way he referred to Blu-ray as “” back in 2008 during a Q&A with members of the press: “I don’t mean from a consumer point of view—it’s great to watch movies—but the licensing is so complex. We’re waiting until things settle down and Blu-ray takes off in the marketplace before we burden our customers with the cost of the licensing and the cost of the drives.” As Macs users well know, things haven’t settled down (at least not from Apple’s perspective). Four and a half years after that comment, OS X still doesn’t support Blu-ray playback, nor has any Mac shipped with a drive capable of even reading or burning data on a Blu-ray disc. And given that few Macs even include optical drives these days, Apple’s never going to bring Blu-ray to the Mac. (The company can already sell you HD movies and TV shows directly from the iTunes Store, so why would Apple want to embrace Blu-ray?) While Blu-ray was in its early days when Jobs made his “bag of hurt” comment, the format has come a long way, and the Blu-ray disc is holding its own in the marketplace. True, people still buy more DVDs than Blu-ray discs, but.

This entry was posted on 10.02.2019.