-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 On 05/11/2014 10:57 AM, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Sun, 11 May 2014 12:40:58 +0300 Andrei POPESCU > <andreimpope...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On Vi, 09 mai 14, 19:50:18, Steve Litt wrote: >>> At this point, I think we should all forget I asked that >>> question, because neither your explanation nor Joel Rees' >>> explanation caused me to understand this distinction, and yet: >>> >>> 1) It seems like everyone else understands it >>> >>> 2) In spite of my complete unknowledge of the difference between >>> these two words, I can convert an iso or a udf to an optical >>> disc, and I can convert an optical disc to an iso or udf (as >>> appropriate), so my mental block isn't hurting me. >> >> Let me try to explain it: >> >> - if you do it right, when mounting the disk you will see a bunch of >> files and/or directories (assuming a Debian .iso) >> - if you do it wrong, when mounting the disk you will see just >> an .iso file >> >> Hope this explains, >> Andrei > > Hi Andrei, > > I'm trying to suppress laughter while I type this. Are you saying > that there was a suspicion that somebody used what, xfburn, to put a > single file on an optical disc, and that single file was the .iso > intended to put an iso9660 or UDF filesystem on the optical disc? > > How would one even do that? And how would they not know they did it? Through a "drag and drop"-style file-copying GUI, which handles the necessary ISO-filesystem creation transparently in the background, and then writes that newly created ISO to the disc. I don't know whether any such exist for Linux (though I'd be mildly surprised if none did), but AFAIK that's been standard behavior for Windows Explorer for at least the majority of a decade now. It's a common enough mistake for Windows users to make, when trying to burn an ISO to disc, that it's worth asking about as an early troubleshooting step. In this case, the OP wasn't using Windows, but that wasn't clear before the question was raised. - -- The Wanderer Secrecy is the beginning of tyranny. A government exists to serve its citizens, not to control them. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1 Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQIcBAEBCgAGBQJTb5OAAAoJEASpNY00KDJr1CYQAJOju27FPfcFpNvI6QSvRBso h/qn3Z/npiEoG/ASZChuRcGFIfYog5dja8DqteSCWubhpOuw6MnvGnrVryAFvboO B3Jx7/XWoUr/T+hueIn0i5q8qLkdIkrT+pbc0yzMS8fUUmU/ytyehjrGkYEJivq6 /hKaz5SZnUxaM2mOx1cnPudbnN1bGoA3VDBvpb7mpUiL9N2gVFh37ZYcmweTpZwK qzMS95QPNayNyQr/W91YdbYfvWKzzdeQHT7uhdjDX60ivaq68em2NhmBW0HgwJ5C L0r1E2qzHwjdcpKITCKmD6MjKvpIk5xXeV7o6piRQrT4XrTghiens2zgqtZpPO0M 7fEUyTFijD8CFGC+HdNM0UGbVH8ny0nWgmHR3ccS+UsFqvRXerYW4z2hjvHDt7PG kUehLiaL7X/4S09CCSBHT1izLClkL6xhgBFwewp6h0Mi9bSrS7Qnj1FnrvgQ0Kx8 27zUE2/gRAo7J75qBniS6ak2OBXvWGrWh308twrXNP7DktTuhgwVsA5Nz2v+8uSp Ffavye4ovqIkEOMtMW94MLXkGs7JFQc8Ri3yUSKv4zZkWSy8+Q9i1cnGpshUQiRs vTOdCn3PTaEp1YU4D9Y+TVZSLB/WM7R2AEXDzYo/u9ylaWeCDwsrTUWnzmzg/G5c jDkGXaPqJc50nofaawtA =oQSS -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/536f9380.80...@fastmail.fm