Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Hewitt Tech
I just ran across a tool called undisker at www.undisker.com that is supposed to be able to read from a .iso image file. Normally you would use a CD burner to burn the image to a CD but this tool allows you to read the contents of the .iso file. You can extract one or more files from the .iso file

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Travis Roy
> I just ran across a tool called undisker at www.undisker.com that is > supposed to be able to read from a .iso image file. Normally you would use > a > CD burner to burn the image to a CD but this tool allows you to read the > contents of the .iso file. You can extract one or more files from the

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Hewitt Tech
Cool! I had no idea you could do that with a file. -Alex P.S. Now that's a nice little advantage over Windows. - Original Message - From: "Travis Roy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Hewitt Tech" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 9:17 AM Subject: Re: A

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Cole Tuininga
On Thu, 2003-01-09 at 09:13, Hewitt Tech wrote: > I just ran across a tool called undisker at www.undisker.com that is > supposed to be able to read from a .iso image file. Normally you would use a > CD burner to burn the image to a CD but this tool allows you to read the > contents of the .iso fil

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Hewitt Tech
Is loopback device support the default for most kernels? -Alex - Original Message - From: "Cole Tuininga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 9:39 AM Subject: Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images? On Thu, 2003-01-09 at 09:13

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Hewitt Tech
Look's like loopback device support is the default for Libranet V2.7. Just tried mounting the file and it worked on my default installation. -Alex - Original Message - From: "Cole Tuininga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 9:39 AM Subject: Re: A

Re: Linux Telephone Systems?

2003-01-09 Thread Larry Cook
FYI, Ken D'Ambrosio wrote: I know that there is some stuff out there; It's called "Bayonne", and it's backed by GNU http://www.gnu.org/software/bayonne/ I also found a good paper presentation that makes it sound like they want it to become a turnkey system for small businesses. Cool! I k

RE: Win4lin Performance (was: another windoze emulator)

2003-01-09 Thread Tilly, Lawrence
Thanks to you both for the first-hand info, Jason & Ben!! I'm pretty confident StarCraft is at least as resource and DX intensive as anything I currently play, so I guess I'll look more into Wine than win4lin. -Lawrence -Original Message- From: Jason Stephenson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: Anyone heard of an open source tool to read ISO images?

2003-01-09 Thread Jason Stephenson
Every distro that I've ever used, Slackware, Red Hat, Debian, Mandrake, had support for loopback devices compiled in the generic kernel. I don't recall if FreeBSD includes support for vn (loopback) devices by default or not. I know I have it compiled in my kernel. Just so you know, you can moun

Re: Win4lin Performance (was: another windoze emulator)

2003-01-09 Thread Ben Boulanger
On Thu, 2003-01-09 at 01:38, Jason Stephenson wrote: > It uses DirectX 5, and most games that do should work. These are older > games. I've heard that someone got War Craft III working with either > Win4Lin or Wine, but I haven't actually seen it, or maybe that was with > VMWare? I play warcraf