I burned and tried different distros and all of them the DVD reader laser was moving back and forth like mad and loading and install was so slow that it impossible to continue. Tried 2 different readers.
Fedora Silverblue: the optic reel was moving like mad and loading was so slow that it triggered the anaconda text installer
It stayed there for hours so I desisted
Elementary OS 8: Same as Fedora Silverblue but at least could load the wallpaper installer UI. Not possible to load live OS
Lakka OS: Lakka state on their site DVD’s can’ t be used anymore for their images https://www.lakka.tv/get/linux/generic/
Yeah I know USB thumb drives are like £5 but I wanted to have my silly little fun with my discs and newly bought burner. I remember when I started using linux distros didn’t had this kind of problem and live versions could be used, slow but usable.
Thank you all for your input @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]
Laptop got a SSD and SMART OK
So I burned at the lowest speed Fedora Vauxite and Rescuezilla and they worked fine. Burned Fedora Silverblue many times testing at the lowest speed, other burning app, other DVD burner and same problem. So it could be the ISO but why?
- Fedora Silverblue and eOS were downloaded from their site torrent
- Checked ISO integrity and OK
- Enabled to check integrity on K3B after burning
- I have flashed those same ISOs to USB thumb drives and install fine
Gotta do further testing but I have to buy a DVDRW to stop wasting so many DVD’s and prolly consult with the Fedora forum
The Anaconda installer suggests workarounds, gotta test them later
Id get fresh iso’s. And also try at other speeds. Long ago I can remember… oddities…with slower burns.
Hardware issue?
I cannot speak for “all distros” but I know from experience that this statement is not true. There are also numerous “retro” YouTube channels where you can watch people burn DVDs to install Linux on older hardware. I have seen at least one of those in the past month.
Finally, the ISO file format is the native format of optical media like DVD. When you use an ISO to create a USB stick, you are starting with a DVD image (typically). If it is a valid ISO, you can burn it to a DVD and go.
In terms of “slow”, is it possible that expectations have simply changed and we have forgotten how slow things were back in the day. DVD throughput that is working fine is going to feel slow to us today. Just like we are no longer super impressed that we can store 4.7 GB on a disc.
Try burning your DVDs at the slowest speed possible.
When I still used optical media, software things simply would not work if burned fast.
I’d set 1x on my burning software. I think my writer was new enough that it’d only go down to 4x but it worked fine.Debian will probably install from stone tablets if you find the right ISO.
If you can open the installer I think it’s not an ISO problem but a problem with the file written on the DVD. Maybe it got corrupted?
I think they’re wrong I’ve installed from iso files many times and they are just images of the disks.
Ya sure the optical drive is still good?
Got an old laptop with bluray drive and a newly bought USB bluray burner, both same issue
Idk. Maybe a bit more detail about the process? Try redownloading the iso’s? What software are you using to burn? Tried any bios changes, like with UEFI, secure boot or csm legacy stuff?
Did you verify the media after burning?
Wild idea: check the condition of the SDD (presumably) that you’re trying to install to. After all, an installation has two endpoints, and if the target disc is on its last legs and throwing SMART errors, it ain’t gonna be too happy getting written to.
SSD is a bit optimistic for that laptop, quick Google shows a potential 5400rpm sata drive
@yumyumsmuncher hahahahaha why worry about that