I did, I have actually solved the problem now.

On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 11:11 PM, Norman Golisz <li...@zcat.de> wrote:
> Hi John,
>
> On Fri Nov 11 2011 16:44, Norman Golisz wrote:
>> On Fri Nov 11 2011 23:07, John Tate wrote:
>> > # cdio -f cd0c tao /home/john/ubuntu-11.10-desktop-i386.iso
>> > cdio: The media can't be written in TAO mode
>> >
>> > What am I doing wrong?
>>
>> You don't read manuals.
>>
>> cdio(1):
>>
>> > -f device
>> >     Specifies the name of the CD device, such as /dev/rcd0c.  Both
>> >     absolute and relative paths to /dev filenames are possible; the
>> >     raw partition name is added if needed.
>>
>> Meaning that when you specify "-f cd0" it internally converts it to
>> "-f /dev/rcd0c".
>>
>> Also, you probably want to explore disklabel(8) and the difference
>> between raw-level and block-level access of block devices. Read a UNIX
>> book of your choice, or stick with Google hunting for an explanation.
>
> even though this information is not principally wrong, it was unrelated,
> incomplete and written inadequately rude. Sorry for that.
>
> However, did you compare the ISO's checksum after downloading it?
>
> Norman.
>
>



--
www.johntate.org

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