Al:
I think you were right about the file system. Hard drives, flash drives, and USB flash drives all use a FAT 32 hard drive type file system. CDROMs and DVDROMs do not. They will not look like a HD or flash drive to the Bryston when connected via the USB port.
But I guess I do not understand why Bryston would not design their modded PC system in the BDP-1 to recognize DVD ROM and CR ROM file systems as well. I know it's a marketing call, but this is PC101 as far as computer design goes. It would allow users to access and play disks directly (if not music CDs, then CDROMs/DVDROMs with ripped files). At USB 1.0 specs the Bryston uses, modern DVD drives could easily keep up with thumb drives for access speeds. As far as media costs go, flash memory is running about $1/GB or about $.50/CD (typically 480 MB/CD). DVD+R media is running at $0.10/GB or less.
I think you were right about the file system. Hard drives, flash drives, and USB flash drives all use a FAT 32 hard drive type file system. CDROMs and DVDROMs do not. They will not look like a HD or flash drive to the Bryston when connected via the USB port.
But I guess I do not understand why Bryston would not design their modded PC system in the BDP-1 to recognize DVD ROM and CR ROM file systems as well. I know it's a marketing call, but this is PC101 as far as computer design goes. It would allow users to access and play disks directly (if not music CDs, then CDROMs/DVDROMs with ripped files). At USB 1.0 specs the Bryston uses, modern DVD drives could easily keep up with thumb drives for access speeds. As far as media costs go, flash memory is running about $1/GB or about $.50/CD (typically 480 MB/CD). DVD+R media is running at $0.10/GB or less.