I remember using one called imgburn years ago.
IsoBuster for iso image extraction
ImgBurn for burning
Windows 7 has one built in.
This is a good one.
There are lots of them.
Just hit your computer with a hammer and then you won’t need that software anymore.
IsoBurner
What operating system are you running? It was built into Windows last time I downloaded some Linux distros and burned them several years ago. That was several years ago, but it was a whole lost easier when that in used to be when I needed to run a separate program.
Burn a CD or DVD from an ISO file (Windows 7)
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows7/burn-a-cd-or-dvd-from-an-iso-file
If you’ve gone to Windows 10, here’s something that apparently worked with the pre-release versions (not sure if it was disabled or not in the final release)
How to Burn ISO Files in Windows 10
http://wind8apps.com/burn-iso-files-windows-10/
Deepburner is great. I have used it for years.
The free version works great for home use.
http://deepburner.com/?r=products
I’ve been able to burn iso files to disk with win 7 on up.
Recent versions of Windows have one built in. Right the ISO file in explorer and select “burn to disc”.
ImgBurn is a simple and reliable freeware program to do it.
Windows 8.x and above will also let you “mount” the ISO to extract files or install from it.
Give us more details of what your trying to do. going forward the likelihood of having an optical drive is low. So building backup/ storage on a chip or usb drive is more likely. That said Ive had to mount a virtual cd (ISO file) to install software on a non optical drive computer. We can help make it easier depending on what the issue is.
Give us more details of what your trying to do. going forward the likelihood of having an optical drive is low. So building backup/ storage on a chip or usb drive is more likely. That said Ive had to mount a virtual cd (ISO file) to install software on a non optical drive computer. We can help make it easier depending on what the issue is.
Give us more details of what your trying to do. going forward the likelihood of having an optical drive is low. So building backup/ storage on a chip or usb drive is more likely. That said Ive had to mount a virtual cd (ISO file) to install software on a non optical drive computer. We can help make it easier depending on what the issue is.
Magic ISO maybe...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImgBurn
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InfraRecorder
Infra recorder has a nice interface and is free
A handy chart
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_disc_authoring_software
M4L iso
cdrecord -v -pad dev=0,0,0 myfile.iso
why I love linux.
I like 7-zip because I can also open executable files with it.
People still burn stuff to disks?
Just one:
LINUX
Any version.
Tech savvy: Imgburn.
Joe User: CDBurnerXP
Both do about the same thing - CDBurnerXP is probably easier to cope with and understand.
CDBurnerXP bundles, so be careful on the install - don't 'accept' anything other than the main program. Once installed, open CDBurnerXP, look in the selection dialog that comes up first, Select 'Burn ISO Image', point it to your ISO file, and tell it to burn. Once it's done, close open dialogs (it assumes you may want to burn more copies).
Can I interest you in an excellent labeling system?