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DVD replication
Being an animator, I often draw small portions of animated movies that are eventually put together as complete movies. When I just want to save the information for future use I copy what I need from my computer onto a DVD.
Lately I have finished a professional and full version animated movie in a professional studio, and wanted to make a lot of copies of my finished product. I have been told of a good DVD replication center in my home town, when I entered the store the very polite manager asked me if I want a regular copy, in other words to duplicate my DVD, or if I wanted a DVD replication, which meant the DVD copies would stay faithful to the original DVD master, I realized I didn’t really know what I wanted. The manager kept on explaining to me, or better said, trying to sell me, the DVD replication method. I believed there was one main reason for him to try and convince me to get the DVD replication method for my work, it cost double than the regular copying method, but since I was sincerely intrigued to know the difference, I let him mumble some more.
I have decided to copy my DVD using the DVD replication method, my main cause to choose this method is that it is much better than just copying the DVD, something I could do in my own computer. When you copy a DVD with the DVD replication method, a new master is made out of the original DVD and only then being copied onto new DVD's, maintaining all the original movie art works intact.
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