On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 11:14:18 -0700 (PDT) "Fred J." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> does the following change the situation > > ******************************************************* > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ growisofs -Z /dev/hdd -R -J myPc > Executing 'mkisofs -R -J myPc | builtin_dd of=/dev/hdd obs=32k seek=0' > INFO: ISO-8859-1 character encoding detected by locale settings. > Assuming ISO-8859-1 encoded filenames on source filesystem, > use -input-charset to override. OK, so you're burning an image or something to a blank dvdrw. > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls /dev/hdd > /dev/hdd > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ > > where is the file? There isn't one. Not really. In a sense, the 'file' is whatever you burnt prior to mounting it, which could be an iso image, a copy of a movie, a bunch of data files, what have you. In order to see the files, you need to mount the device, either manually or as a configurable option if you use a graphical window manager such as KDE/Gnome. Once mounted, you can cd into the mount point (typcically /media/cdrom1 or /media/cdrom0) and look for the files. Oh, and btw, don't top post and don't forget to trim your replies. I'm not complaining specifically about this post but the last few posts have consisted of 1 line responses followed by the entire quoted text of the prior reply. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ David E. Fox Thanks for letting me [EMAIL PROTECTED] change magnetic patterns [EMAIL PROTECTED] on your hard disk. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]