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PUBLIC MARKS from tadeufilippini with tags "cd dvd burning" & image

04 November 2008 05:15

ISO Recorder v 2

by 8 others
ISO Recorder Welcome to the ISO Recorder download page. ISO Recorder is a tool (power toy) for Windows XP, 2003 and now Windows Vista, that allows (depending on the Windows version) to burn CD and DVD images (DVD support is only available on Windows Vista), copy disks, make images of the existing data CDs and DVDs and create ISO images from a content of a disk folder. ISO Recorder has been conceived during Windows XP beta program, when Microsoft for the first time started distributing new OS builds as ISO images. Even though the new OS had CD-burning support (by Roxio), it did not have an ability to record an image. ISO Recorder has filled this need and has been one of the popular Windows downloads ever since. With an advent of Windows XP SP2 and Windows 2003 the version 2 of ISO Recorder has been released, which introduced some new features including ISO image creation and support for non-admin user. Finally, in Windows Vista it became possible to address another long-standing request and provide DVD burning capability. Since the very beginning ISO Recorder has been a free tool (for personal use). It is recommended by MSDN download site along with Easy CD and Nero and is used by a number of companies around the world. Download ISO Recorder V1 - for Windows XP Gold (no service pack) and Windows XP SP1 ISORecorder V2 - for Windows XP SP2 and Windows 2003 (including 64-bit OS) ISO Recorder V3 - for Windows Vista CreateCD - command-line CD burning tool for Windows XP (all versions), Windows 2003 and Windows Vista Which version of Windows am I running? Hit ÿ-Break (Windows key and Pause/Break) or click Start, then right-clik on My Computer and select Properties.

04 November 2008 04:30

BurningIsoHowto - Community Ubuntu Documentation

(via)
* BurningIsoHowto Conteúdos 1. MD5 Sums 2. Windows 3. In Mac OS X 4. In Ubuntu 5. In Kubuntu 6. In Xubuntu Ubuntu is distributed over the Internet as CD image files, called ISOs. To install Ubuntu, you first need to burn its ISO file onto a CD. You need a working CD/DVD burner and an 80 minute (700 Mb) CD for this. This page explains how you can do it using Windows, Mac OS X, Ubuntu and Kubuntu. If the CD writing fails, try writing at a slower burn speed. The CDIntegrityCheck page describes how to verify the integrity of the finished disk. If your finished disk fails to boot when you restart your computer, please refer to the BootFromCD page. The GettingUbuntu page has links to the ISO image files, as well as other methods of GettingUbuntu. See CdDvd/Burning for information about burning cd or dvd in general