Do you know this problem? You buy a piece of computer hardware and you get a driver CD in a sleeve. You buy a computer magazine and you get a bonus CD in sleeve. You buy washing powder and you get a free movie DVD as special advertising stunt (in a sleeve, of course). After some time, all those loose discs tend to pile up in some drawer of your desk and it becomes a nightmare, finding the one again, you are looking for.
Of course, there are numerous products like CD traveling cases and storage boxes, which deal with exactly this kind of problem. However, they come with two problems of their own. The first being, that they do not scale very well. Once they are full, they are full. No way of expanding capacity except by buying a new box/traveling case, which is an expensive thing to do considering the low value of the disks, you intent to store in them. The second problem is, that traveling cases/boxes were designed for traveling and not for putting them in or on office furniture meaning, that they come in all kinds of non standardized sizes and shapes.
So instead of having loose disks litter your desk's drawers, you'll end up with loose cases doing the same thing for a higher price.
Ideally, you'd want to store your disks in a ring binder, which itself can be stored in a filing cabinet. Only problem here: Since you cannot punch holes in your CDs, you need an adapter for them. Of course, such adapters can also be bought in every good office store, but if you are looking for the cheap, do it yourself solution, which does about as well as the original paper sleeves, then look no further. Simply download this filing sheet (pdf), print it on a piece of paper, cut along the dotted lines, add holes, using a paper puncher and you are ready to go.

The suggested use for the two and a half boxes on the right is for indexing. The upper half of the smaller box should contain the ID of the ring binder, the sheet is going to be filed in, the lower half should contain the ID of the disk itself, so disk and sheet can easily be returned to their proper place, if they get removed.
The large box is meant to contain a summary of the disk's content itself or for taking notes.
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