Guest Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 I've got 3 files and they're .img, .ccd, and .sub. What program will burn all 3 files onto a cd and be bootable? IMGburn will only see the .img and clone CD only sees the .ccd Quote
Sparda Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 k3b will burn ISO images and CCD, not sure about the sub (isn't a .sub file usually used for subtitles for movies). But really why would any one use any thing but ISO? Quote
Guest Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 k3b will burn ISO images and CCD, not sure about the sub (isn't a .sub file usually used for subtitles for movies). But really why would any one use any thing but ISO? I downloaded Win...BarbieAdventure OS II. I think subtitles are .SRT Is there a program like k3b for Windows? Quote
Sparda Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Using 'non-common' disk image formats is a trick by (so called) 'pirates' to get people to download software that you either have to pay for or comes loaded with malware. Quote
Guest Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 ImgBurn. I do love imgburn but it won't burn the other files. Quote
metatron Posted December 31, 2007 Posted December 31, 2007 Off the top of my head I think Magic ISO or Power ISO support them. Quote
Deveant Posted January 1, 2008 Posted January 1, 2008 whats the size of the .sub? if its under 2meg open it up in notepad. Most of the time, subtitle files are either str or sub files, but i have also found some sub files to contain burning rules as the same way a .dvd file does. Quote
felony_destined Posted January 5, 2008 Posted January 5, 2008 oh sorry, I didnt fully read your first post... well I know with clonecd when reading an image from a file you wanna create a .cue file and thats what you'll use to burn Quote
MMZ Posted January 6, 2008 Posted January 6, 2008 CloneCD is the answer. While CloneCD will only show the .ccd file in the 'burn image file' dialog box, all that the .ccd file contains is information on the image type, clone CD image making version, etc. The .img file is the actual disk image. The .sub file is the subchannel information - that's harder to explain. Usually, though, CloneCD will also produce a .cue file, though I'm not sure if it requires it or not in order to burn the image. Quote
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