CNET editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Excellent
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 02/05/2002
Earlier this month, CenDyne was ordered by the Superior Court of California to shut down. The company is no longer shipping products and is not servicing warranties, honoring rebates, or providing technical support. Consumers should exercise caution before purchasing CenDyne products. Read the full story. (August 22, 2003)
Packing light
Weighing approximately 12 ounces and measuring 5.1 by 5.6 by .6 inches, the CenDyne is the thinnest and lightest mobile CD-RW drive we've tested. Its small size also made it difficult to fit much more than the drive mechanism within the case, so there are no volume or playback controls to complement the unit's headphone jack. However, these functions can easily be handled via software from your notebook. Also, the CenDyne won't run on USB bus power alone, so you'll need to keep the included 4-ounce AC adapter in your travel kit.
We didn't have the production documentation or packaging, but we didn't need it; setting up the CenDyne was absurdly simple. Just plug the drive into the USB port with the supplied cable, plug in the AC adapter, and you're ready to rumble. The drive is compatible with Windows XP, Me, and 2000. Our Windows Me and Windows 2000 test systems instantly recognized the drive, and no additional drivers were required. Installing the bundled Nero Burning ROM from Ahead Software took about five minutes and required one reboot. After that, it was smooth (and speedy) sailing.
A star performer
The CenDyne 8X/8X/24X Slim CD-RW drive proves that USB 2.0 truly allows top-flight performance. In CNET Labs' tests, the drive took only 8 minutes and 3 seconds to burn our 500MB test file to CD-R; it took 6 minutes and 25 seconds to packet-write 400MB to CD-RW. It also installed Microsoft Office 2000 Small Business Edition in a mere 2 minutes, 15 seconds. Those times are right on target for the drive's ratings and considerably faster overall than those of the Plextor PlexWriter 8/8/24U and the Addonics Pocket CD-RW. One exception involved the audio-extraction test, in which the CenDyne took 80 seconds longer than the PlexWriter to extract a 26-minute audio file. The CenDyne also features buffer-underrun-protection technology so that you can multitask while burning discs without fear of creating coasters.
Included with the drive are Ahead Software's Nero 5.5, for CD-mastering, and InCD, for packet-writing. Nero's learning curve is a bit steep, but you'll be glad you took the time to learn the ins and outs of what is easily the most reliable and powerful mastering program available. Continue reading
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