Download NERO.
Load the iso file into NERO, and Nero will do the rest!
Don't have a burner and want to see the ISO as a virtual CD, then download Daemon tools (its free) here....
http://www.afterdawn.com/software/cdr_software/cdr_tools/daemon_tools.cfm
2006-08-05 15:24:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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To answer your question, a "ISO" image is how the files are put together, You need a ISO burning program, i.e., Nero, Roxio, or just about all burning software that comes with a CD Burner will burn the iso file to cd, thus revealing the true apps, file, program, etc. When you buy a CD Burner, it comes with a CD that has the burning software on it, you can type in a yahoo or google search, type in "free iso burning programs" without the quotes, you can come up with plenty... Here is the best "Freeware" Version.. Best of Luck
Note: Spin's link is no longer available for download, if you want daemons tools try my second link, it is working as of 8/05/06 9:30 pm CST.
2006-08-05 22:30:52
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answer #2
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answered by Devil Dog 6
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Burn the .iso image.
An ISO image (.iso) is an informal term for a disk image of an ISO 9660 file system. More loosely, it refers to any optical disk image, even a UDF image.
As is typical for disk images, in addition to the data files that are contained in the ISO image, it also contains all the filesystem metadata (boot code, structures, and attributes). All of this information is contained in a single file. These properties make it an attractive alternative to physical media for the distribution of software which requires this additional information as it is simple to retrieve over the Internet.
Some of the common uses include the distribution of operating systems, such as Linux or BSD systems, and LiveCDs.
Most CD/DVD authoring utilities can deal with ISO images: Producing them either by copying the data from existing media or generating new ones from existing files, or using them to create a copy on physical media.
Most operating systems (including Mac OS, BSD, Linux, and Windows, with third-party tools) allow these images to be mounted as if they were physical disks, making them somewhat useful as a universal archive format.
Console emulators, such as ePSXe, and many other emulators that read from CD/DVD, are able to run ISO/BIN (and other similar formats) instead of running directly from the CD drive. Better performance is achieved by running an ISO since there is no waiting for the drive to be ready and the hard drive I/O speed is many times faster than the CD/DVD drive.
The .iso file is a digital copy of CD contents made this way: the ripper searches for the sectors of the CD that have been used, say 251,000 for instance (there are 330,000 sectors on a 74 min CD and 360,000 sectors on an 80 min CD). Each sector is copied on the .ISO file, one by one, and only 2048 bytes for each sector (only the ones containing the user data) are copied. The .ISO file should then be of size 251,000 x 2048 = 514,408,000 bytes. (It will be slightly bigger if the extractor puts a header on the file, like Nero .NRG files that are .ISO files plus a small file header).
2006-08-05 22:24:53
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answer #3
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answered by NA A 5
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An ISO image is an exact copy of the data stored on a CD.
If you have Nero you can either burn it to a CD, or run it straight from your hard drive using Nero's Image Drive, which is a pretend CD drive.
2006-08-05 22:25:16
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answer #4
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answered by tattie_herbert 6
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ISO files are nothing but CD images - the exact copy of a CD ina single file.. If you got any CD-recording tools with your computer or CD writer drive, you could use it to write the ISO file to the CD..
Nero can do that for you or you could get some free CD-eriting tool available online..http://www.download.com/Burn4Free-CD-DVD/3000-2646_4-10559989.html?tag=lst-0-3
This is a good tool for writing CD's !!
2006-08-05 22:30:26
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answer #5
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answered by xlord_vader 3
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yes, an iso image is a cd or dvd image ... almost any burning app will have an image burning section and iso is pretty much a universal format ... im betting if you have any recording software at all it will open the image
2006-08-05 22:24:33
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Get a program that burns .iso files. A good, free one is called ISOrecorder.
2006-08-05 22:21:38
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answer #7
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answered by The Emb3r Egg 2
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