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ISO's

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barryzito777's Avatar
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09-May-2009, 12:25 AM #1
Smile ISO's
I just downloaded about 15 .iso files that are supposed to be part of this DVD and i wanted to know how to put them together? What program do i need? How can I put them together? Thanks for the help.
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09-May-2009, 12:30 AM #2
are you trying to burn a single .iso onto a dvd, or more than one iso onto a dvd?
dvd decrypter, freeware you can use to burn .iso files, dvd shrink also freeware to use for ripping dvds and backing them up to vts files or an iso image.
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09-May-2009, 12:52 AM #3
it's a whole lot of little .iso files that's why i'm asking. I have used dvd decrypter to burn 1 iso before i just don't know how to put all there little iso's together.
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09-May-2009, 12:55 AM #4
I'm close to computer illiterate, so I apologize for my incompetence. What is an .iso file?
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09-May-2009, 01:38 AM #5
Do the iso's have any numbering to indicate that they are from a larger, split file?
barryzito777's Avatar
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09-May-2009, 02:08 AM #6
yes here's one of the titles

Asia 61 DVD1.iso.004

and it goes on and one .005, .006, .007, .....
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09-May-2009, 03:45 AM #7
Oh, OK. You need to download HJSplit and use it to concatenate the files. Put all the files in the same folder and use HJSplit's "join" function. Point it to 001 and it will automatically find all the others.

HJSplit doesn't do any type of file verification. It just hooks them end to end. So if one of the files is invalid, the final file will be, too. If there is an invalid one, it would probably be a different size from the others (except the last which just includes the remainder).
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11-May-2009, 03:23 AM #8
An ISO image is an archive file (also known as a disk image) of an optical disc in a format defined by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). This format is supported by many software vendors. ISO image files typically have a file extension of .ISO but Mac OS X ISO images often have the extension .CDR. The name ISO is taken from the ISO 9660 file system used with CD-ROM media, but an ISO image can also contain UDF file system because UDF is backward-compatible with ISO 9660.
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11-May-2009, 12:19 PM #9
Quote:
Originally Posted by benjonson View Post
An ISO image is an archive file (also known as a disk image) of an optical disc in a format defined by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). This format is supported by many software vendors. ISO image files typically have a file extension of .ISO but Mac OS X ISO images often have the extension .CDR. The name ISO is taken from the ISO 9660 file system used with CD-ROM media, but an ISO image can also contain UDF file system because UDF is backward-compatible with ISO 9660.
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You didn't plagiarize this, did you?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_image
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11-May-2009, 04:51 PM #10
Lol, he didn't claim it as his own...was just informing me...
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11-May-2009, 04:55 PM #11
Quote:
Originally Posted by TheShooter93 View Post
Lol, he didn't claim it as his own...was just informing me...
He didn't link to his source either ...
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13-May-2009, 03:33 PM #12
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kitch View Post
He didn't link to his source either ...
Quite aside from the fact that the "quote" is singularly useless. We know what iso's are. That isn't the problem.
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