Dave: 1.) Thanks for your input. I'll check these possibilities out. 2.) My apologies for straining your email inbasket. R, John A.M. Darnell Project Leader Internal Software Development Walsworth Publishing Company Dave McGary <[log in to unmask]> Sent by: Macintosh Scripting Systems <[log in to unmask]> 02/17/2006 03:03 PM Please respond to Macintosh Scripting Systems <[log in to unmask]> To [log in to unmask] cc Subject Re: Off Topic: CD Doctor Hey John, How about posting your questions where they are "on topic"? Try some of these newsgroups: seattle.users.macintosh comp.sys.mac.apps comp.sys.mac.hardware comp.sys.mac.storage comp.sys.mac.misc Or try looking for answers in newsgroups via Google "Groups". You might find what you are looking for on VersionTracker.com Toast is a Mac application which burns CDs, which requires it to read CDs. It is a good product, and it may solve your problem. Good luck. --Dave On 2/17/06, John A.M. Darnell <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Hello All: > > The company accepts input from hundreds of schools on CD. Many of > those CDs are originally unreadable once we get them in house and we have > to spend much time making them readable. > > The fact that we can make them readable in the end (usually it involves > one of my programmers walking around the plant and inserting the CD into a > Mac box until he finds one that reads the disk) leads me to conclude that > we'd have an easier time of it if we only had the right software to help > diagnose the problem. > > Do any of you know an equivalent of "Norton Disk Doctor" or something > similar that would work on CDs? > > Any other suggestions you might have would be gratefully received. > > R, > > John A.M. Darnell > Project Leader > Internal Software Development > Walsworth Publishing Company >