Toast Burn 2.1.1 Purchase For Mac

Roxio deposits six applications into the Toast 9 Titanium folder: Toast Titanium, Streamer, CD Spin Doctor, Disc Cover 2 RE, DiscCatalogMaker RE, and Get Backup RE. New with this version, Streamer is an application that lets you use your wired or wireless network to stream video from your Mac to other Macs and PCs, or even an iPhone or iPod Touch. You can also stream video over the Internet, which means you can watch a show stored on your Mac from a remote location.

Also new in this version is Get Backup RE, a basic but well-designed. The Recording area has been further enhanced by combining all recording functions into one area, including the selected recorder status, recording options, disk type selector, the Record button, and my favorite, Save as Disc Image, which is now a button in the Recording area, rather than a menu item. It’s odd that Roxio added a Save as Disc Image button to the Recording area, but left the Save as Bin/Cue option in the menu. I’ve never used this option, but for the sake of consistency, I would have expected both options to be added as buttons. Perhaps Roxio decided to leave that particular refinement for the next version.

Of course, if you haven’t purchased a third-party Blu-ray drive yet, you won’t have a destination for those beautiful HD files. Toast 9 provides an elegant solution to this dilemma, although this workaround may not suit everyone.

Mac

Toast Burn 2.1.1 Purchase For Mac Pro

You can burn HD files to a standard DVD, single- or double-layered, and it will work the same as a Blu-ray disc would in a Blu-ray player. The tradeoff with using a standard DVD is time; you’re limited to about 15 minutes of HD content when you burn to a standard DVD. This may be adequate for home HD movies you pull off your HD camera, but if you’re copying video from a source such as EyeTV or TiVo, you’re going to need a Blu-ray burner.