== Letting go of having an optical drive in my machine For various reasons I'm finally getting somewhat serious about planning out a new PC to replace [[my current one ../linux/HomeMachine2011]], and this is forcing me to confront a number of issues. One of them is the question of an optical drive. I've had a succession of PCs over the years, and from the start they've had at least one optical drive (initially CD-ROM drives and then DVD drives). Back in those days it was somewhere between a required feature (for reading CD-ROMs and [[playing music ../linux/CDPlayerQuest]]) and a slam-dunk 'why not' thing. For example, look at what I said for [[the last machine ../linux/HomeMachine2011]]: > I definitely want a DVD reader and the extra cost for a DVD writer is > trivial, *even if I haven't burned any DVDs at home over the past five > years* that I've had a DVD writer in my current home machine. That emphasis is foreshadowing. It's been five years since I wrote that, and in those five years I don't think I've actually used my current home machine's DVD drive more than a handful of times (and I definitely haven't burned anything with it). In fact right now [[my DVD drive has been broken for more than a year PCBuildingProblem]] and I haven't missed it. (At work, I've burned a handful of DVDs over the years because we still do Ubuntu installs from DVDs for various reasons.) Under normal circumstances I would put some sort of optical drive into my next machine as well, but unfortunately the circumstances are not normal (as far as I know). I now want to be able to connect at least six hard drives to my machine (although I expect to normally have only four), and modern optical drives are all SATA drives and so consume a SATA port on your motherboard. The current generation of Intel chipsets provide at most 6 SATA ports, which means that motherboards with more than 6 SATA ports are much less common and are supplying those extra SATA ports through some additional controller chipset that may or may not work really well with Linux. (I have a jaundiced view of add-on controller chipsets of all sorts. Even server vendors have cheaped out and used chipsets that just didn't work very well, such as [[old nVidia Ethernet chipsets ../linux/NvidiaEthernetIssue]].) In addition, not putting an optical drive in my next machine doesn't mean going without an optical drive at all, because external optical drives generally work fine, both for reading and for writing (and probably also for things like playing music and watching movies). At work we've mostly given up on getting new servers with optical drives unless they're basically free; instead we have a collection of external DVD drives that we move around as needed. All of this is completely sensible and logical, but it's still something I've had to talk myself into and it's going to feel weird and a bit unnerving to have a machine without an optical drive. It feels like I'm going to be traitorously giving up on the old optical disc media that I have, even if I have an external drive that should be perfectly good for working with them. (Humans are not entirely rational creatures, myself included, and so this entry is partly to talk myself into this.) === Sidebar: Blu-ray drives aren't a consideration right now The short version for why not is that Linux can't really play Blu-ray discs. I mean, yes, [[it's theoretically possible https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Blu-ray]], but reading about it doesn't inspire me with any confidence for its long term viability or general usability. For the immediate future I expect that if I want to view Blu-ray media, I'm going to need a standalone player with all of the annoyance that that implies. Blu-ray discs don't have enough data capacity to deal with [[my backup issues ../linux/HomeBackupHeadaches]], which are going to call for external hard drives for the foreseeable future.