Yeah looks good to me. PIE's are normal, as long as you don't have a huge spike of them all is good. PIF's (Parity Inner Failure) are what you want to avoid, a max of 4 is very good and should make for a flawless backup. If you want to know what all this means, read here:
http://club.cdfreaks.com/f76/interpreti ... ans-80545/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Kinda technical, I'd be lying if I said I understood it fully, basically PIE's are normal, all discs will have them no matter how flawless the dyes and burn, PIF's are what you want to avoid. Large groups of PIF spikes could signal an unusable backup. Different model DVD-ROM drives scan ECC blocks differently, so a disc that might be a 98 on a BenQ might be a 90 on a LIteon. Even then, some DVD drives are less picky than others and may only struggle with high PIF discs in certain areas on the disc or maybe not at all. Just because a disc has a high PIF spike doesn't mean it's unusuable, and just because it has a very few PIF's doesn't mean it's flawless. More than anything it comes down to what dyes your DVD-ROM/Burner will read and what is compatible with the firmware. If the Media ID of the disc is not included in the firmware of the drive, then no amount of tweaking is going to make your burner read from or write to that disc. Fortunately most all newer Media ID's are included in newer drives. Unless you are using 3rd rate media made in the heart of the Amazon, your drive will probably recognize the Media ID.
So in a nutshell, PIE/PIF scans are to be taken with a grain of salt. A disc that has been used for 100's of hours may get a low quality score and play perfectly, a disc that is brand new may get a 99 score and not play. It's mainly a tool for A/V guys to brag and post caps or a troubleshooting mechanism if your backups are consistently not working. If you use quality media with quality dyes like Taiyo Yuden or Verbatim, these problems will be few and far between. In CD-DVD Speed, the disc surface scan is considered much more valid than the quality scan, it can give you an idea if the disc surface is readable, which is 80% of the battle.