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-- Have .iso's, will travel (http://discussion.visorcentral.com/vcforum/showthread.php?threadid=17078)
Have .iso's, will travel
if anyone can tell me how to expand them.
I downloaded three .iso files from linuxiso.org for debian linux (PPC). They're very nice, sitting there on my desktop. I think I'd enjoy them more were I able to expand them and burn them onto cd's, however.
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
Use the file - open command in your favorite CD burner software (eaxy cd creater etc..etc..
__________________
-miradu
No dice. I tried doing that with Toast and it didn't find them. So I changed the creator code and the type code and it still wouldn't open them. I can burn the files themselves, but their supposed to be bootable cd's and they aren't with just the one file. I'm getting pissed. Damn computers to hell.
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
sorry for the bad advice 
Make sure that under the CD properties panel, that you have bootable checked as an option. You might have tto swwitch the CD burning to the other one (juliet or ISO 9960.. cna't remember) to get the boot option..
All linux cd's come with a floppy disk image file
normaly in rawrite format.
use rawrite to make a floppy and than jsut use the cd normall..y
right?
__________________
-miradu
quote:
Originally posted by miradu2000
sorry for the bad advice
quote:
Make sure that under the CD properties panel, that you have bootable checked as an option. You might have tto swwitch the CD burning to the other one (juliet or ISO 9960.. cna't remember) to get the boot option..
quote:
All linux cd's come with a floppy disk image filenormaly in rawrite format.
use rawrite to make a floppy and than jsut use the cd normall..y
right?
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
oh yeah - if you have another comp aviable, try doing a network install.... but than you need - ieiei.. floppys can be very helpful. I myself have never succesfulyl created a bootable CD.. - I jsut boot off my favorite boot floppy and launch whatever app I need to 
sorry
__________________
-miradu
Sorry I missed this. Haven't been keeping up with the threads recently.
Anyway, if you didn't already know, .iso's are files that are an ISO9660 disk image in a file. The only thing you should need to do is write a raw image to the CD. (I've done this a number of times under Linux. Never used Toast before).
Hope this helps.
__________________
It's gotta be weather balloons. It's always weather balloons. Big, fiery, exploding weather balloons.
-- ComaVN (from Slashdot)
What version of Toast are you running? Who produces Toast? Do they have a FAQ?
edit: OK, Toast is a Roxio (Adaptec's software division) product. They do have FAQs and whatnot. Also, depending on which version of Toast you have, I may have found your problem: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=b...er1.al.home.com
Good job Toby...that sounds like exactly what he needs.
Damn fine work, Toby!
There appears to be a way around the OEM limitations, however.
http://www.linuxiso.org/README.burning-CD-with-Toast
quote:
to mount an iso and be able to use it properly you must
1. download the plugin at http://www.tempel.org/joliet/ this fixes the
filenames on the iso.
2. download the iso and click and drag on the link and choose save link
as.
3. open it in diskcopy
4. then make a copy of the image by dragging it into toast under either
disk copy or files and folders.
5. burn away
__________________
-Joshua
Abortion: Darwinism at its finest.
Good luck. BTW, this is evidently the file problem the Joliet plugin fixes.
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