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mmalves

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Everything posted by mmalves

  1. While in Write mode, select the MDS file as the disc image you want to burn. ImgBurn will then read from the other files and burn your DVD accordingly.
  2. If they don't have protection against copying, then yes, since ImgBurn's Read mode reads sector-by-sector from the CD/DVD to an ISO image, regardless of the actual filesystem/data that it contains.
  3. Please post the log (you can find it at Help/ImgBurn logs).
  4. There's a B110 firmware on Dell's Support site if you want to try it out.
  5. Go to Tools/Drive/Capabilities and check if your burner supports the type of media you're using. You may also want to check for firmware updates for your burner.
  6. Wikipedia articles for ISO9660, Joliet and UDF filesystems. Notice that ImgBurn's Build mode generates discs/images with the UDF 1.02 standard, which is the most widely supported version of the UDF standard. I recommend using ISO9660 + Joliet filesystem, unless you need support for long (more than 64 characters) filenames and/or support for single files bigger than 4 GiB. In those cases you'll need to use UDF. As for DL media, DVD+R DLs are slightly bigger than DVD-R DLs.
  7. The DVD-R standard doesn't allow overburning. You might be able to overburn with DVD+Rs (use the slowest burning speed available).
  8. Use only Verbatim DVD+R DL media (burn at 2.4x for best results) and you'll probably never have problems again
  9. Try to read from the CD using IsoBuster. You might be able to extract the photos/videos that way.
  10. View/Queue, hit CTRL+ALT+Q or click the Queue button (the one which has a blue plus symbol)
  11. For some reason your burner doesn't like the media you're using. Look in Tools/Drive/Capabilities to see if that media is supported. You might also want to check for firmware updates (there's an option for that in the Tools/Drive menu).
  12. Yes, it is possible, but video quality is decreased in order to achieve a smaller size. If you want to retain the quality, you should use dual-layer media, and while you're at that, please only use Verbatim DVD+R DL media and burn at 2.4 for best results.
  13. Go to Tools/Settings/Write tab and enable the DVD-RAM / BD-RE FastWrite option. Your discs should now be burnt at 2x from start to finish
  14. ImgBurn can't copy protected DVDs...
  15. That message appears when, for some reason, your HD couldn't sustain the transfer speed needed for burning. To avoid that, defragment your HD and don't use "heavy" programs while burning. Also, please upgrade to the latest ImgBurn available.
  16. On the lower right of ImgBurn's window, change Write Speed from "AUTO" to the speed you want to use.
  17. The media you're using is known for being really bad quality. Try and get Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden discs and you'll never have problems again. Also, you might want to apply the latest firmware available for your burner (KL0N).
  18. mmalves

    Funny vid

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfyZ3tuNMm8
  19. There are 2 CLI switches that do what you want:
  20. Post the log of your failed burn/attempt and we'll be able to tell what's going on
  21. If you have access to a CD with Windows XP (no service packs) or Windows XP SP1 integrated, you could use that as a base to slipstream SP3 onto.
  22. While you have all the files in XPSETUP folder, why don't you slipstream SP2 in there? That way your CD will have SP2 integrated
  23. Yes. When you copy the contents from the source CD you need to keep the file/folder structure. That's why I said to use Windows Explorer, as it'll copy everything from the CD as-is.
  24. Then your file/folder structure is wrong, because NTLDR should be inside the i386 folder.
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