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Unlike the DVD-RW format, DVD+RW was made a standard earlier than DVD+R.
DVD+RW discs can be rewritten about 1,000 times, making them comparable with the DVD-RW standard. DVD+RW discs are commonly used for volatile data, such as backups or collections of files, and are in fact slightly better at storing these types of data than DVD-RW. However, they are not as widely used for home DVD video recorders as DVD-RW, primarily because they were originally designed for data, rather than video, storage.
One competing rewritable format is DVD-RW. Hybrid drives that can handle both, often labeled "DVD±RW, are very popular since there is not yet a single standard for recordable DVDs.