Will Disk Utility Burn a DL Disk Image to DVD?

Will Disk Utility burn a DL Disk Image created by iDVD to a DL DVD? I'd like to save myself the rendering time to find out that it won't, if that is the case.

JCC,
The last I knew there could be a problem with setting the proper break point when creating/working from the disk image of a double layer disc, but I may have missed something recent.

Similar Messages

  • Disk Utility won't create Disc Image from DVD

    I'm trying to copy a DVD that I made in iMovie and iDVD. The DVD plays fine, using DVD Player. I open Disc Utility, select the DVD, click "New Image," and save to a directory. The hard drive has plenty of room. Disk Utility then shows a stop sign and says "No such file or directory".
    Is Disc Utility saying that there's no such file/directory/DVD to copy from, or no such file/directory to copy to? I've tried many file names and many directories on 5 hard drives.
    I've tried selecting under "Image Format" both "read-only" and "DVD/CD Master." I leave "Encryption" at "none."
    My computer has had this problem for at least six months, with dozens of DVDs. I've used both the internal 105 optical drive and an external 111 optical drive.
    I clicked "Help" in the Disk Utility menu, but there's no help pages.
    Is there another software application that copies DVDs? I tried Mac the Ripper, but it seems to only copy DVDs to my hard drive. I can't figure out how to make a DVD from the M-the-R files on my hard drive. Dragging to a blank DVD and burning produces a DVD that won't play in DVD Player.
    G5 dual 1.8GHz   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Hi Thomas,
    there are several out there. Probably the one with the highest reputation is Roxio's Toast Titanium. But you could also try Fast DVD Copy or DVD2oneX2.
    If this answered your question please consider granting some stars: Why reward points?

  • Disk Utility: Burn error: 0x80020022 The device failed to respond...

    I've been working on archiving a ton of video to DVD. I'm using Dual-Layer discs to minimize the amount of physical storage space needed for the finished project. I burned several discs in iDVD in July and regularly received errors. Then the drive suddenly stopped loading any type of media. Anything I inserted would spin briefly and then eject. Repaired permissions and followed steps outlined here and here. Took the Mac back to the store where I bought it (sadly, not an Apple Store - nearest one is 12 hrs away) where naturally it performed flawlessly for the store rep.
    So I took it home and resumed burning, now saving as a disc image (ignoring iDVD's warning about the performance of DVDs burned this way) and using Disk Utility, since iDVD didn't seem to be reliable. Burned about 25 discs, error-free, in this fashion, then three days ago, got the error: "Unable to burn “Disc 19.img”. (The device failed to respond properly, unable to recover or retry.)"
    Retried the same image, and it worked. Then burned two more in the same fashion with no errors. Today I got the same error again. Logs are identical for each failed burn, except for the time span between certain lines.
    Price of DL media being what it is, I'd hate to keep ruining discs if there's something I can do to avoid it. I suppose it could be bad media, but it seems odd that I'd get two bum discs that close together after burning so many without issue. Checked the site and the forums, and there doesn't seem to be any answers. Does anyone have any ideas? (Other than "try a different brand of media." I've got a buttload of these discs and it's too late to return them now.) Even if it just helps determine where the issue lies. Warranty will be up soon, so if it's hardware related, I need to get it taken care of quick.
    Media: Philips DVD+R DL 8x
    *Drive info:*
    HL-DT-ST DVDRW GS21N:
    Firmware Revision: SA15
    Interconnect: ATAPI
    Burn Support: Yes (Apple Shipping Drive)
    Cache: 2048 KB
    Reads DVD: Yes
    CD-Write: -R, -RW
    DVD-Write: -R, -R DL, -RW, +R, +R DL, +RW
    Write Strategies: CD-TAO, CD-SAO, CD-Raw, DVD-DAO
    Media: Insert media and refresh to show available burn speeds
    DiscUtility.log:
    2009-10-03 08:54:01 -0600: Burning Image “Disc 22.img”
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Image name: “Disc 22.img”
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Burn disc in: “HL-DT-ST DVDRW GS21N”
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Erase disc before burning: No
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Leave disc appendable: No
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Verify burned data after burning: Yes
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Eject disc after burning
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600:
    2009-10-03 08:55:15 -0600: Preparing data for burn
    2009-10-03 08:56:30 -0600: Opening session
    2009-10-03 08:56:35 -0600: Opening track
    2009-10-03 08:56:35 -0600: Writing track
    2009-10-03 09:01:37 -0600: Finishing burn
    2009-10-03 09:02:37 -0600: Closing session
    2009-10-03 09:02:38 -0600: Finishing burn
    2009-10-03 09:38:37 -0600: Burn failed
    2009-10-03 09:38:37 -0600: The device failed to respond properly, unable to recover or retry.
    2009-10-03 09:38:37 -0600: Additional information can be found in the ~/Library/Logs/DiscRecording.log log file.
    2009-10-03 09:38:37 -0600: Unable to burn “Disc 22.img”. (The device failed to respond properly, unable to recover or retry.)
    DiscRecording.log:
    Disk Utility: Burn started, Sat Oct 3 08:55:15 2009
    Disk Utility: Burning to DVD+R DL (CMC MAG D03) media with DAO strategy in HL-DT-ST DVDRW GS21N SA15 via ATAPI.
    Disk Utility: Requested burn speed was 47x, actual burn speed is 4x.
    Disk Utility: Burn failed, Sat Oct 3 09:37:15 2009
    Disk Utility: Burn sense: 4/44/90 Hardware Error,
    Disk Utility: Burn error: 0x80020022 The device failed to respond properly, unable to recover or retry.
    Message was edited by: Weasel42

    I have encountered the same problem. I have a Mac Book Pro from 2007, and it has gone through 3 DVD writers so far, all of which have ruined DVD+R DL disks. I have occasionally been able to burn one, but usually during verify, I get this error message:
    Communication to the disk drive failed: 0x8002022
    And disk utility fails with a "Invalid B-tree node size" error
    Oddly, when I try to burn a disk near capacity (6.5Gb or more) it is more likely to fail than if I burn a smaller disk.
    I've been using Memorex DVD+R DL disks, but I have used other brands in the past but they have failed, too. Out of about 50 disks so far, I have had success with about 5.

  • Anyone know Disk Utility, Ignore Ownership, and disk image DL DVD issues?

    I am currently having issues with backup DVD's I burned using Disk Utility. I can put the dual layer DVD's in and the system reads them. When I try to pull a file off the Dual Layer DVD a circle with an X appears notifying me that I cannot copy the files to my desk top.
    When I check the DVD's permissions it reads Admin (me) read and write with the ignore ownership checkbox checked...which means I should be able to pull files off the DVD. The only way I can currently get information off the DVD is to duplicate the entire disk to a new folder by selecting the DVD while holding down the Cntrl key and selecting duplicate. I have had other issues with DVD's and disk images in Leopard....including having to eject either through disk utility or by selecting the image with the Cntrl key held down. Finder eject, keyboard eject, and the menu eject selections suddenly report that the disk is in use.
    The DVD's were burned by creating a dual layer dvd image through disk utility with the read/write option checked.
    After duplicating 2-3 disks, the system itself is unable to mount any more disks from the series of backups. When I look at disk utility it reads that the disk is not mountable. I have to restart my computer so the system can continue to read the backups.
    My Itunes disk backups are marked the same way (ignore ownership) with admin read/write privlages....I have no problem pulling files off these disks.
    I have tried both logging in as root and booting from an external drive...same problem. Is this some nasty Disk Utility bug? Is anyone else having bizarre permission related issues with Disk Utility and Disk Images.

    When you create the image in Disk Utility, did you
    change the 'Partitions' setting?
    If you leave it to read 'CD/DVD', it will create a ISO9660/UDF image.
    To be able to maintain permission and extended file attributes, you
    need to select 'GUID Partition Map'.
    I assume you used iTunes to create your music backup?
    It seems it creates the correct image type for you.
    Before sending this message, I actually created a single layer image,
    copied some files to it and gave additional permissions to other users on my system.
    Afterwards I copied the files to my Desktop, verifying that the attributes are still intact.
    Best regards
    (It took quite a while to burn this 4x DVD-RW Anyways, I hope I could help)

  • Disk Utility, burning CD-Rs, CD-RWs

    It used to be (in 10.3.8 and earlier?) that you could burn a CD-R or CD-RW using Disk Utility. This was how it worked:
    1. You created a disk image of the size you wanted.
    2. You dragged the files you wanted into the image.
    3. You clicked on the disk image in the sidebar in Disk Utility, and then clicked the Burn icon at top left.
    4. A dialogue came up that allowed you to choose the burn speed and whether you wanted to make the resulting disk appendable (i.e. you could burn multiple sessions on the same disk).
    This isn't working any more -- when I follow this procedure in 10.3.9 (work on a desktop G4) or 10.4.2 (home on a Mac Mini G4), I get a disk that will not mount.
    Is it still possible to burn an appendable disk using Disk Utility? If so, how? And if not, why is the procedure I've described still possible?
    Colin

    Yes, you can still burn multisession cd-rs and cd-rws with disk utility. This is directly from the disk utility help menu:
    In Disk Utility, create a disk image that contains the files you want to burn to the disc.
    The files must be from a volume with a Mac OS Extended disk format. To check a volume's disk format, select the disk in Disk Utility and look at the information at the bottom of the Disk Utility window.
    Select the disk image in the Disk Utility list and choose Images > Burn.
    Select the "Leave disc appendable" checkbox. If you don't see this option, click the triangle in the top-right corner.
    Insert a blank recordable disc in the optical drive, and click Burn.
    Hope this works for you.

  • I can't burn a dvd using any method, Idvd tells me that my super drive is missing, dvd studio pro quits when i click burn and disk utility keeps spitting the disk out when i click burn and enter the disk??? how do i repair my superdrive for imac

    I can't burn a dvd using any method, idvd tells me that my super drive is missing, dvd studio pro quits when i click burn and disk utility keeps spitting the disk out when I click burn and enter the disk??? how do i repair my superdrive for imac, or how do I do whatever I need to do to get it working: I have already tried using a lens cleaning cd and also restored my nvram or something i forget what it was called but i restarted my computer holding down  command+optoion+p+r and still nothing???
    Free solutions are the best, although if I have to pay I will, I would prefer to not have to buy an external burner if possible and already know that is an option so please don't give me that answer... thank you for any help you can give

    Unless your iMac is still covered by AppleCare, get an external DVD burner.
    You can get perfectly good ones from Amazon for less than $40.

  • Disk Utility Freeze when using New Image

    Has anybody experienced the following?:
    my system:
    Brand new Mac Pro 8-core 2.66GHz
    24GB RAM
    Snow Leopard 10.6.3 freshly installed
    Apple SuperDrive DVD
    I am in the process to install a lot of software and I like to make Disk Image of the software DVD to make things quicker to install.
    Now what happens is that as soon as I select New Image from Disk Utility (after selecting the DVD on the left menu), the New Image progress window appears and then Disk Utility freezes. The disk image is being created in the background, but the progress window DOES NOT show the disk image status and eventually I have to OPTION-APPLE ESC from Disk Utility.
    What I have tried is:
    . delete plist for Disk Utility in Preferences
    . repair permissions in SAFE BOOT mode
    After that Disk Utility/New Image will work the first time as expected, and then the next time I am getting the same problem.
    Any ideas what I could try to diagnose/fix this problem?
    Thank you!

    Thanks for your feedback.
    As far as making a disk image or not, yes it takes some times to create it... longer? I am not sure because when you install a software there is a back and forth reading/writing, whereas when you create your disk image it does the reading and writing in a linear fashion... anyway to me the big benefit is when you have more than one disk part of an install (Apple FCS, Adobe CS, etc...) once you have created all your disk image, it will install everything automatically without having to feed each disc... and usually I have to do a fresh install later on... and finally it gives you a backup of your software...
    Thanks again.

  • Yosemite on MacBook Air - Third time installed, now will not be startup disk.  Disk Utility says OK. Disk Warrior says 375 pages of bad .plist files.  How delete plist files?

    Yosemite on MacBook Air - Third time installed, now will not be startup disk.  Disk Utility says OK. Disk Warrior says 375 pages of bad .plist files.  How delete plist files?
    What does "Accessibility" mean?

    Had the same problem, finally realized that the FileVault Encryption was struck at 19%. Speed back up to normal after I disabled FileVault using terminal command - sudo fdesetup diable
    To check whether the FileVault is the culprit, go to System Preferences --> Security & Privacy --> FileVault to see if encryption is in progress.. For me the blue bar was less than a quarter with status 'estimating time remaining'..
    Then open Terminal and type in: sudo fdesetup disable
    It will then ask for the admin password (to be it asked twice), then it was disabled... Back to normal life again..
    Here is my terminal log for reference:
    Last login: Tue Oct 21 23:05:13 on console
    Gowthams-MBP:~ asgowtham$ fdesetup status
    FileVault is On.
    Encryption in progress: Percent completed = 18.80
    Gowthams-MBP:~ asgowtham$ fdesetup status
    FileVault is On.
    Encryption in progress: Percent completed = 18.80
    Gowthams-MBP:~ asgowtham$ fdesetup status
    FileVault is On.
    Encryption in progress: Percent completed = 18.80
    Gowthams-MBP:~ asgowtham$ sudo fdesetup disable
    Password:
    Enter a password for '/':
    ..fdes.
    FileVault has been disabled.
    Gowthams-MBP:~ asgowtham$ fdesetup status
    FileVault is Off.

  • Using Disk Utility to restore/copy disk - who is correct?

    I had two long talks with two separate Apple Care people online today who both insisted what they were saying was right and the other person was wrong.
    Hmm....
    My question is this.
    I have a MBP and the internal HD is currently empty. I've been running off of an external HD for about a year now.
    I want to clone my external HD into my internal HD and use the internal HD as my system disk now.
    One Apple Care person said to go into Disk Utility, select the source disk, from the tabs on the right hand side select Restore and then drag the source disk into the source field, drag the target disk into the target field and press restore. She said this will make a complete clone of the external HD in the internal HD.
    The other Apple Care person said "No no no. You can't do that to clone a system disk that way." He said the best thing was to install a new system and then use the restore as a new system from Time Machine option (where I also have a backup.)
    I believe the second method will work, but it's more cumbersome for me because I haven't been backing up everything in Time Machine. I have excluded items, such as podcasts and Parallels disk images.
    If I could do this from the external system disk life would be easier.
    But is the first Apple Support person right or wrong about this? Can I use Disk Utility to copy the system disk from one external HD to another that way?
    Thanks,
    doug
    p.s. I am not in the market for 3rd party software to deal with this one-time issue, so if possible I would like to accomplish this using OS X included features...

    The advantage is CCC has built in routines that "bless" (see the Terminal.app command "bless") the
    os x installation so it will boot properly on the new volume it is being installed on.
    Disk Utility simply copies (restores) files from one volume to another. Many times this works just fine.
    Sometimes it won't boot afterwards. Most of the time (as long as there are no system files missing
    or corrupted) a person may "bless" the drive and restore it to working condition.
    CCC is not a "magical" application, it is in fact a front end to applications that already exist separately
    in OS X (asr, hdiutil, diskutil, bless, etc.).
    It doesn't matter to me how you do it. It's your time not mine. Everyone should spend some time
    behind the command line in terminal. I do many tasks using the command line, including and not
    limited to complete system restores, backing up data, disk partitioning, installing software, disk
    repair, permissions repair, ACL management, restoring data, managing disk images, network
    management, user management, file management, etc. Many people are fearful of the command
    line. I feel just the opposite, I'm fearful without it.
    Say Hello to my little friend.
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/enUS/Command_Line_Adminv10.5.pdf
    http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/unixopensource/clix.html
    http://www.macobserver.com/tips/macosxcl101/index.html
    http://www.matisse.net/OSX/darwin_commands.html
    Kj

  • Disk Utility can't repair disk

    Hi, I just saw that the amount of memory left on my HD just dropped around 60GB, so I used the "Verify Disk" option on Disk Utility, and the output was:
    Verifying volume “Macintosh HD”
    Performing live verification.
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking catalog hierarchy.
    Checking extended attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Checking volume information.
    Volume header needs minor repair
    The volume Macintosh HD was found corrupt and needs to be repaired.
    Error: This disk needs to be repaired. Start up your computer with another disk (such as your Mac OS X installation disc), and then use Disk Utility to repair this disk.
    I don't have the disk right now, so is there some other way I can repair it, get another install disk, or anything else? I've been thinking of booting up with a Linux livecd, but can it access the HFS+ filesystem?
    Thanks.

    Try this: from http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1417
    Start up your computer in single-user mode to reach the command line.
    Note: If necessary, perform a forced restart as described in the Emergency Troubleshooting Handbook that came with your computer. On desktop computers, you can do this by pressing the reset/interrupt button (if there is one) or holding down the power button for several seconds. On portable computers, simultaneously press the Command-Control-power keys. If your portable computer doesn't restart with this method, you may need to reset the Power Manager.
    At the command-line prompt type:
    /sbin/fsck -fy
    Press Return. fsck will go through five "phases" and then return information about your disk's use and fragmentation. Once it finishes, it'll display this message if no issue is found:
    ** The volume (name_of_volume) appears to be OKIf fsck found issues and has altered, repaired, or fixed anything, it will display this message:
    ***** FILE SYSTEM WAS MODIFIED *****
    Important: If this message appears, repeat the fsck command you typed in step 2 until fsck tells you that your volume appears to be OK (first-pass repairs may uncover additional issues, so this is a normal thing to do).
    When fsck reports that your volume is OK, typerebootat the prompt and then press Return.
    Your computer should start up normally and allow you to log in.
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  • Macbook Pro not booting after update. ''Disk Utility can't repair disk''. Help needed!

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    1. Re-install OS X 10.8 - but it says the disk is locked or OS X cannot be installed on Recovery HD.
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    If anyone has any solution to this issue it would be much appreciated!

    I just ran the Disk Utility, and cannot very disk. It gives me an error message;
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    1 HFS volume checked
    Volume needs repair
    and when I run the repair, this is the message:
    The volume GERRARD could not be repaired.
    Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit
    1 HFS volume checked
    1 volume could not be repaired because of an error
    Repair attempted on 1 volume
    1 volume could not be repaired
    Prior to running Disk Utility, I have already tried DiskWarrior, and could not repair my disk. Anyway I can fix this problem??? Formatting the disk would be my last option (though I am unsure if it will fix the problem). Any advise would be greatly appreciated. Meanwhile, I will continue to back up my file, and delete unused data and try to run it again.
    Thank you all very much for any input.
    Cheers,
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  • Disk Utility - Can't repair Disk - Help needed :(

    Hi,
    I have some trouble to use Disk Utility (on my iBook G4 - 1.33 Ghz+1 GB RAM)
    I run Disk Utility to verify and repair permissions, which worked, and then Verify Disk. HEre is the logged result:
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Aug 26 09:32:58: Disk Utility started.
    Verify permissions for “E=G4”
    Determining correct file permissions.
    Permissions verification complete
    The privileges have been verified or repaired on the selected volume
    Verifying volume “E=G4”
    Checking HFS Plus volume.
    Checking Extents Overflow file.
    Checking Catalog file.
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking Catalog hierarchy.
    Checking Extended Attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Volume Bit Map needs minor repair
    Checking volume information.
    Invalid volume free block count
    Invalid volume free block count
    uld be %@ instead of %@)",2)
    4078185
    4078184
    Volume Header needs minor repair
    The volume E=G4 needs to be repaired.
    Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit
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    The underlying task reported failure on exit
    1 HFS volume checked
    Volume needs repair
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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    (E=G4 is the name of my Hard Drive on the iBook)
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    Message was edited by: ObiYann

    I just ran the Disk Utility, and cannot very disk. It gives me an error message;
    Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit
    1 HFS volume checked
    Volume needs repair
    and when I run the repair, this is the message:
    The volume GERRARD could not be repaired.
    Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit
    1 HFS volume checked
    1 volume could not be repaired because of an error
    Repair attempted on 1 volume
    1 volume could not be repaired
    Prior to running Disk Utility, I have already tried DiskWarrior, and could not repair my disk. Anyway I can fix this problem??? Formatting the disk would be my last option (though I am unsure if it will fix the problem). Any advise would be greatly appreciated. Meanwhile, I will continue to back up my file, and delete unused data and try to run it again.
    Thank you all very much for any input.
    Cheers,
    Matt

  • How do I do this:  "This disk needs to be repaired. Start up your computer with another disk (such as your Mac OS X installation disc), and then use Disk Utility to repair this disk?"

    "This disk needs to be repaired. Start up your computer with another disk (such as your Mac OS X installation disc), and then use Disk Utility to repair this disk."

    Stick the disk in, reboot holding c.
    Disk Utility is a menu option about the 2 or 3rd screen in the installer. (don't install OS X!)
    Because your booted form the installer disk, you can repair the disk.
    Quit and exit the installer and reboot.
    If your drive is not repaired, make a note of all what it says, for Apple to use.
    Reboot and get your files off to a external drive,
    Take the note and your comptuer to Apple for a warranty/Apple care call, they will replace the drive.

  • Disk Utility has been Shrinking disk for several hours....

    I have an external HD (FW800/GUID) that has 2 partitions in it that I'm trying to reduce the size of one of the partitions to make room for a third without deleting anything on the drive. Disk Utility has been 'shrinking disk' for several hours and I'm debating if it's hanging. I see no activity on the drive, so I'm not sure what's going on.
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    What's the chance that the data will be corrupt if I force quit disk utility?
    In the middle of repartitioning that has apparently hung? I would guess it would range somewhere from high to certain. You should immediately use Disk Utility to repair both partitions after force-quitting.
    I didn't make a backup
    I hope you're lucky, but I have the feeling you're about to learn your lesson about not having backups in a very severe way. If the drive cannot be repaired at this point, you may need a file recovery utility like [Data Rescue|http://www.prosofteng.com> or [File Salvage|http://subrosasoft.com/OSXSoftware/index.php?mainpage=product_info&productsid=1].
    In the future, you absolutely must have a minimum of two backups (three copies) of any data you can't afford to lose.

  • Disk utility can't repair disk, back up and restore files......I need help, I'm worried I'll lose all my photos, files etc

    Mac started hanging up while streamlining a kids show. Restarted and got the screen with the apple and the circle. restarted with control-option p and r. Ran disk repairitem got the following results;
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    volume repair complete,
    updating boot support partitions for the volume as required,
    Error disk utility can't repair disk
    I'm then prompted to back up all files, reformat the disk and restore backed up files.
    Obviously need help here as I think I'm in danger of losing my files, photos etc if I don't do this right.
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    Steve

    You might want to back up the disk as soon as possible, do the repair, then back it up again. First time will have the issues that Disk Utility can't fix, however, you'll have the data saved.  Then, once you get things repaired, make a new backup, and go from there.
    If you're going to use a hard drive directly connected to your iMac for backup, this is what I mentioned earlier: http://twelvesouth.com/products/backpack/ Great way to use space behind the iMac without adding something else to the desk top. You can buy it through Apple online/stores or Amazon, and there are probably other sources too.
    For external hard drives, I like those sold by OWC at http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/firewire/ as many of them use Oxford chip sets, wihch work well with macs (I've used several for years with no issues). Most pre-packaged drive/cases have a 3 year warranty, although you can buy a case and add your own hard drive. I like Western Digital Scorpio Blacks that have a 5 year warranty.

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