Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for 'create bootable grub2 image'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • General
    • Announcements
    • Drives
    • Media
    • FAQ
    • Guides
  • ImgBurn
    • ImgBurn Support
    • ImgBurn Bugs
    • ImgBurn Suggestions
    • ImgBurn Translations
    • ImgBurn General
  • Other
    • Chat
    • Test

Calendars

There are no results to display.


Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


AIM


MSN


Website URL


ICQ


Yahoo


Jabber


Skype


Location


Interests

  1. While it seems madFLAC is pretty standard with ImgBurn, while not as convenient, I use Foobar2000 to convert FLAC back to standard WAV temporarily anytime I want to burn a standard Audio CD. but on Linux it appears I don't have much choice as, at least to my knowledge, madFLAC can't be setup on ImgBurn on Linux. so my ImgBurn is just on a basic installation which it can directly use WAV files without issue. so I guess the general point is... even if you can't get any special stuff (madFLAC etc) working with ImgBurn, as long as ImgBurn installs and it's basic function works, you can do what I do to create a standard Audio CD with ImgBurn.
  2. I bought a music box-set that contains a number of discs (CD, DVD Audio, Blu-ray audio). To prevent damage to the originals, I would like to create 1:1 disc clones (as my personal copies, ie. not for resale) and play those instead of my originals. Some of these formats contain 24bit/96kHz uncompressed, 24bit/192kHz uncompressed, 24-bit/48 kHz uncompressed, Dolby Digital @448 kbps, Dolby Digital @640 kbps. Can someone direct me on how I can create exact 1:1 copies. Thanks.(I'm located in Canada)
  3. This isn't really a bug, per se. More like a request to adjust disc type determination logic. Here's the scenario: I was trying to create a DVD Video disc with a VIDEO_TS in the root directory. The root directory also had an AVI file in it. ImgBurn detected the VIDEO_TS folder and then asked me if I wanted to make a DVD Video disc, which I said yes to. ImgBurn THEN detected the AVI file and asked me if I wanted to make a Divx Disc. I said no to that. Should the ImgBurn logic in this case determine if the user makes one choice, like in the above situation, it should refrain from asking to change the disc type again? Thanks!
  4. Hello experts. I'm in need of create image file from optical disc in these 3 formats: dmg , pdi , gi It was on the list of ImgBurn supported formats, not sure if is read only or write also supported? If not, please advise which Windows software can do it? Or anywhere we can download a small disc image in dmg , pdi , gi formats? Thankssssss
  5. Can ImgBurn create an ISO of an existing Windows10 OS Hard Drive that has 3rd party apps already installed beforehand? My plan is to take this Win10 ISO and use it inside of a VirtualBox VM I have running in Linux Mint. Will my idea work? I ask because I am uncertain if ImgBurn can create an ISO of an existing Win10 OS. And also whether VirtualBox will accept such an ISO. If ImgBurn cannot create such an ISO please share any alternatives that may work. Any opinions welcome.
  6. Thanks for that Microsoft account workaround! I knew it existed, but I couldn't recall what it was. My setup is okay as it was a Windows 10 that I created back when local accounts were possible and upgraded to Windows 11. But, on my next new PC, I wanted to create a local account, but couldn't remember how to do it.
  7. Sorry for the late reply as I just noticed your post here a week later. anyways, I took a quick look online and I think I found the Reddit post you mentioned which is about 5 months ago. when I did my HWID stuff it was late October 2023. so less than 5 months ago when I did the HWID activation. but for kicks I installed Windows 10 in a fresh QEMU/KVM VM a moment ago. then checked activation status, which is not activated as expected, then I tried that HWID method and... it worked ; you can clearly see it's activated... 'Activation Windows is activated with a digital license'. before that it was in red saying it was not activated etc. but just to make sure the HWID activation method also still works on Win11, I tried Windows 11 on a fresh VM a moment ago and checked activation status and said not activated. then I ran the HWID method and it shows 'Windows is activated with a digital license'. just to do one last test to confirm it lasts... I completely deleted the VM's virtual hard drive and created one fresh, but used the same UUID when it was activated a moment ago on the previous VM's virtual hard drive, and... it still worked as you install Win11, skip over the activation part when it asks, then once you reach the desktop I checked activation status and it's activated with no further action needed on my end. so in short... that HWID still works on Win10/11. TIP: to dodge Microsoft's 'forced' Microsoft account junk just type in 'no at thankyou dot com' (with 'at' being '@' and 'dot' being '.') and then enter any random password (it does not matter what it is and you don't even need to remember it) and it will error shortly after that and allow a local account instead (which you then create with your own password like usual which you want to remember) as I saw that on another site and heard it worked but I never tried that until now and it worked exactly as they said.
  8. ImngBurn can create such an ISO, but whether that ISO will backup all files is questionable. And whether that ISO can be made "bootable" in a virtual machine or run as a Windows installation I wouldn't know. I've never done any virtualization, so I know nothing about VirtualBox.
  9. I'm copying several CDs and DVDs to preserve my collection of videogames. Never had an issue before, all the videogames are original and well preserved (all PC games from 1996-2000). This specific game is a multitrack CD and obviously i can't create an ISO file from a multitrack CD, therefore i was trying to create a .bin file, but suddently it's showing sectors:0 size:0bytes and the process remain stuck at session 1 track2. I've waited over 40 minutes, restarted, opened Imgburn as administrator, tried some troubleshooting without any progress. Am i missing something? It may be caused by the fact that i've reinstalled ImgBurn after several years and may have forgotten some plug-ins i should have installed?
  10. I created a 4 episode on DVD FAB and made a customized menu. DVD Burned fine. It plays on any drive connected to my computer but will NOT Play on the Sony DVD player I have connected to my TV. Just a blenk screen, no messges, nothing. don't know what file to submit. snapshots of one of the dvds follow: HL-DT-STBD-RE_BT10N GNOB (USB) Current Profile: BD-ROM Disc Information: Status: Complete State of Last Session: Complete Erasable: No Sessions: 1 Sectors: 10,343,200 Size: 21,182,873,600 bytes lime: 2298:31:25 (MM:SS:FF) MID: VERBAT-IMe-000 Supported Write Speeds: 2x, 4x, 6x TOC Information: Session 1... (LBA: 0) -> Track 01 (Mode 1, LBA: 0 - 10343199) -> LeadOut (LBA: 10343200) Disc Definition Structure: Certified: No Scanned: No Manufacturers Name: PIONEER Additional ID: BD-RW BDR-212V Serial Number: ADDL010097WL BD Disc Information: Disc ID: VERBAT-IMe-000 Disc Type: BD-R Disc Size: 120 mm Disc Class: 0 Disc Version: 1 Disc Time Stamp: 03/2010 Number of Layers: 1 Layer Type: Writable DVD Layer Present: No CD Laver Present: No Channel Bit Length: 74.50 nm (25 GB Per Layer) Push-Pull Polarity: Positive Recorded Mark Polarity: HTL| BCA Present: Yes Maximum Transfer Rate: Not Specified First PAA of Data Zone: 131,072 Last PAA of Data Zone: 1,658,494 Performance (Write Speed): Descriptor 1... - > BO: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00 - > EL: 12219391 (0x00BA73FF) - > RS: 26,973 KB/s (6x) - WS: 8,991 KB/s (2x) Descriptor 2... - > B0: 0x02, B1: 0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00 - > EL: 12219391 (0x00BA73FF) - > RS: 26.973 KB/s (6x) - WS: 17.982 KB/s (4x) Descriptor 3... - > BO: 0x02, B1:0x00, B2: 0x00, B3: 0x00 - > EL: 12219391 (0x00BA73FF) - > RS: 26,973 KB/s (6x) - WS: 26,974 KB/s (6x)
  11. Good morning to the whole community. I'm trying to understand where is the mistake I'm making even though I have dozens of tests without a correct result, that is, I can't boot the ISO created from a bootable USB pen drive. Premise I downloaded Kaspersky Rescue Disk. The file is an ISO. I install the ISO on the pen drive through RUFUS. The pen drive is bootable and its operation is correct (tested on PC after bios post and before the operating system). Problem How do I get the reverse process now? That is, through imgburn I want to create a bootable ISO starting from the pen drive. Resolution (currently unsolved). Obviously I start the ImgBurn program, click on creating a new image from files/folders. I select the source letter of the pen drive, select the advanced tab, then select the bootable disk tab. I activate the make a bootable disk flag Now I tried to extract the boot image and insert it into the boot image. Start the creation of the ISO but the newly created file is not bootable (tested with a virtual machine) while the original ISO works correctly (again tested with a virtual machine). I also tried looking for a boot image from the disk, but I can't figure out which file to select and if there is any other flag or value I need to set This helps me understand which are the correct settings I need to use. The problem is that some programs allow you to directly create a bootable USB pen drive without the possibility of having an ISO to manage instead. Where is the error? Thank you
  12. Probably the program you are referring to is ventoy (open source). A utility that formats the USB pen drive and makes it multi-bootable. The program partitions the drive into two parts, the first with a very small operating system, the second available for the user to copy multiple bootable ISOs inside. Unfortunately OnTrack EasyRecovery does not create CDs or ISOs but only bootable USB pen drives. Extracting the files for a bootable ISO from the pen drive would be much more malleable and flexible as a solution, because an ISO can be managed much more easily without tying up a pen drive for a long time.
  13. I remember doing a search online towards the end of last year for something to make ISO's from bootable flash drives. I had this application that would create a bootable flash drive and then you could select ISO's from the flash drive for booting from. That way, you don't need multiple flash drives, just multiple ISO's on one flash drive. I found nothing that could make ISO's, like you said. And as I said, Macrium Reflect does not create ISO's. It instead uses a proprietary format. Is there a particular reason why you need ISO specifically and that any of those other program's read file formats aren't suitable?
  14. the basis of this thread is creating an ISO file from a bootable USB pen drive. I started from the Kaspersky Rescu Disk base because I had the test ISO and it is available for anyone who wants to answer me and find a solution. It is obvious that if I have an ISO that without it I have to create a bootable USB pen drive and then create the ISO again. I actually have a bootable USB stick with the OnTrack EasyRecovery program bootable. The program itself creates this bootable USB pen drive. There is no ISO that I could handle differently. So here's the dilemma. So like in the first post, I have a bootable USB pen drive and I want to get a bootable ISO file. There are also other programs that allow you to create bootable pen drives but do not create ISOs. Now if it exists (and I think so, perhaps we need to look in the boot image for the solution) let's try to find the solution. Thank you all
  15. If you have a bootable ISO you downloaded and wrote to a USB flash drive, why do you want to create a new bootable ISO? Did you add files to the flash drive and want them rolled up into a new bootable ISO? If so, for that, I use a piece of paid software called UltraISO. It allows you to inject files into an existing ISO.
  16. What’s the reason behind trying to create an iso from your usb stick rather than using the iso you originally downloaded? The original iso was meant for burning to disc. What Rufus has created on your usb stick isn’t.
  17. Well, very few people actually patrol the forums much anymore. So, you're probably not likely to get another answer. In the meantime, if you haven't tried this already, see this Guide: Unfortunately, this guide is fairly old and it was what I followed to try and create bootable ISO's that never booted.
  18. it doesn't suit me. My goal is to create an obviously bootable ISO file. Thank you all the same. Do you think I should wait if some other expert on the forum and the ImgBurn program could help me or should I already close the thread with your previous answer, so it's not possible?
  19. With creating a bootable ISO from a set of files and a bootable image extract: nothing. What I do is with a bootable flash drive, I use a piece of paid software called Macrium Reflect to image the flash drive. It doesn't create ISO's though, but a proprietary file format it can write to flash drives.
  20. I use optical media for backup purposes, not for general usage. helps keep wear on the drive less this way and it's not like one really need to use CD/DVD etc much nowadays besides data backup anyways given one can get plenty of hard drive space for reasonably cheap for quite some time now. p.s. if you wanted you could say make a single uncompressed rar/zip file with a bunch of smaller files if you wanted. but I guess it depends on how small and how many as to whether it might be worth doing that or not. like if it's a bunch of smaller txt files, I would probably create a single '.7z' file with compression here. but if the files are not too small and you don't have tons of them, just burn them to CD/DVD straight up.
  21. Hello people! I was burning some soundtracks onto CD's (using Microsoft Media Player for Windows 7) and i wanted to create a .CUE file of the CD so i can add track info and burn it o another CD. While the first one was created flawlessly, the other CD gets stuck while analizing Track 14. They both have the same amount of tracks and they are the exact same CD (HP Branded CD-R). Is the second disc faulty? or do i need to use another software? Also, here's the ImgBurn Log: I 15:04:23 ImgBurn Version 2.5.8.0 started! I 15:04:23 Microsoft Windows 7 Professional x64 Edition (6.1, Build 7601 : Service Pack 1) I 15:04:23 Total Physical Memory: 4.104.848 KiB - Available: 2.138.652 KiB I 15:04:23 Initialising SPTI... I 15:04:23 Searching for SCSI / ATAPI devices... I 15:04:23 -> Drive 1 - Info: ATAPI iHAS122 ZL0C (A:) (ATA) I 15:04:23 Found 1 DVD±RW/RAM! I 15:17:52 Operation Started! I 15:17:52 Source Device: [2:0:0] ATAPI iHAS122 ZL0C (A:) (ATA) I 15:17:52 Source Media Type: CD-R (Disc ID: 97m26s66f, CMC Magnetics Corp.) I 15:17:52 Source Media Supported Read Speeds: 4x; 8x; 10x; 16x; 24x; 32x; 40x; 48x I 15:17:52 Source Media Supported Write Speeds: 16x; 24x; 32x; 40x; 48x I 15:17:52 Source Media Sectors: 308.661 I 15:17:52 Source Media Size: 725.970.672 bytes I 15:17:52 Source Media File System(s): None I 15:17:52 Read Speed (Data/Audio): MAX / 1x I 15:17:52 Destination File: C:\Users\exper\Desktop\dfwsef.bin I 15:17:52 Destination Free Space: 5.190.152.192 Bytes (5.068.508,00 KiB) (4.949,71 MiB) (4,83 GiB) I 15:17:52 Destination File System: NTFS I 15:17:52 File Splitting: Auto I 15:18:45 Abort Request Acknowledged E 15:18:46 Operation Aborted! - Duration: 00:00:53 E 15:18:46 Average Read Rate: N/A - Maximum Read Rate: N/A
  22. I'm hoping someone here can answer my question. I use Program Director 20 to make movies. An output option for the source is to burn to a DVD or .iso file. If I choose to burn the DVD it won't play on a stand alone DVD or Blu-ray player. The screen says 'unable to read disc'. I can put the same DVD in a computer DVD drive and it will play. I can take the .iso option and create the file, then use a separate tool (ImgBurn) to create a DVD that will play on the external DVD / Blu-ray or a computer's DVD drive. I have software that will look at the 'info' for a DVD. For the one created by Program Director it shows "Data DVD" and for the one created by ImgBurn it shows "Video DVD". I have been trying to work with the Program Director support team to get them to understand that the DVD they produce will not play in the stand alone players (I have 3). They claim that because they can play the discs on their computer using VLC that they are valid DVD discs. I say that computers can read/play either a Data or Video DVD but stand alone players. can't. They disagree and say their software will burn only video DVD on a video DVD disc. Does anyone know what setting they may have set incorrectly to produce a Data DVD instead of a Video DVD? -Arthur K
  23. There are only 2 options in PD20; burn a DVD or create an .iso file. If I burn a DVD I do have the VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS on the disc, but it won't play on a standard DVD player. When I develop movies, I create .iso files and play them with VLC until I'm satisfied with the movie, then I had hoped to burn the DVD using PD20 so I could send it to relatives. Now I see I must use the .iso file and burn with different software.
  24. For about 20 years, I've been using ConvertXToDVD to make DVD's. I've always had the software create VIDEO_TS output and used ImgBurn to create DVD Video discs from the VIDEO_TS and burn the resulting image file it creates with it.
  25. Hi Lightning UK, I'm using HP DVD+R Double Layer 8X 8.5GB 240min Video The Power Director 20 (PD20) can create an .iso image file and / or burn a DVD. If I choose the .iso file (playable on the computer using VLC) I can then use a burning software to burn a DVD and it will play on a standard DVD player or a computer. (PD20 doesn't have an option to burn a DVD from an .iso file.) If I choose to burn the DVD directly from PD20 the DVD will play on a computer but not on a standard DVD player. I have a software called DVDfab Copy. If I start DVDfab and put the PD20 disc in the drive, DVDfab doesn't do anything. I have to select the DVD drive for the software to open the disc for copying. If I press the 'info' button it says the disc is DVD (Data) (see above). If I put the ImgBurn DVD in the drive, DVDfab immediately recognizes it and prepares to copy the disc. Pressing the 'info' button the disc shows DVD (DVD-Video). The latest update from Cyberlink support says PD20 produces a DVD disc that can be played on the computer using VLC and that's all it's supposed to do. That's not helpful because why would anyone want a DVD that can be played ONLY on a computer and not a standard DVD player. Most of my family is older, doesn't own a computer but does have a DVD player. At this point I'm flogging a dead horse. Cyberlink support isn't about to either admit the PD20 software doesn't produce a DVD for a standard player or to contact the development team to find out why. I see my solution as using ImgBurn to use the .iso file from the PD20 output. Their movie producing software is good and I'm familiar with it now so I'm not about to change. I'll just add the extra step as a manual 'finishing' process. I was hoping I could be able to definitely find out why and let them know so they could update it. However, I've not been able to determine why their software burns (what appears to be) a data DVD, playable only on a computer.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.