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Martez Fields

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Aug 2, 2024, 11:06:29 PM8/2/24
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PowerISO 7.3 Free Download for Windows supporting almost all versions and architectures. Setup file is completely standalone and also its an offline installer. PowerISO is an efficient application to control and supervise ISO images.

The PowerISO 7.3 is powerful image file compression and file processing tool which helps to create, extract, edit, compress and burn ISO images. It provides a reliable environment with straightforward options and an easily understandable user interface that helps you to use this application in an easy way. This powerful application has the ability to mount these files as an internal virtual drive. You can also like to download Nero Platinum 2018 Suite.

Moreover, there is a variety of powerful tools and PowerISO also supports shell integration for instance, clipboard, drag and drop, context menu etc. This application has ability to make bootable CD image files and also processes the ISO/BIN images.Furthermore it also compress files to a compressed archive. This archive is protected by the password in this application. While concluding we can say, PowerISO is an handy application for the management of images and it must be tried for once.

PowerISO - is a powerful image processing and file compression tool, which allows you to create, extract, compress, edit and convert ISO/BIN image files, and mount these files with internal virtual drive. And most of all, the compressed files can be used directly without decompressing.

It can process almost all CD / DVD / BD image files including ISO and BIN files. PowerISO provides an all-in-one solution. You can do every thing with your ISO files and disc image files. PowerISO support almost all CD/DVD-ROM image file formats (ISO, BIN, NRG, IMG, DAA and so on).

Note: DAA (Direct-Access-Archive) is an advanced format for image file, which supports some advanced features, such as compression, password protection, and splitting to multiple volumes. It can be handled directly just like other formats, such as ISO, BIN,

This video shows the method to mount an ISO file with PowerISO. The first step involves the opening of the Internet browser and Google. Type 'poweriso' in it and press 'search'. Click on the download link in the first search result and download PowerISO. This can be done by clicking on the 'download site 2' and clicking on 'Run' in the resultant window. Install the PowerISO and open it. Click on 'Mount'. Select 'Set Number of Drives' and choose one. Select the drive and select the ISO file you want to mount. Open 'My Computer' and the drive of the file. This completes the procedure.

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I've tried everything to open a download I did yesterday, its a folder of RAR files, I think they are ebooks, thats what it says on the site I downloaded them from, but it could be small videos. I extracted the RAR and it came up with a BIN and a CUE file, now I don't know what to do next. It told me to burn them onto a disc, did that, still nothing...does anyone have any ideas on what I can do? I'm using Mac OS X Snow Leopard.

As for the BIN and CUE files, you need PowerISO in order to extract or mount the data. This is basically an image file that need to be burned, mounted, or extracted in order to retrieve the data from it.

you can't attach pics to the forum .... "un"fortunately.
if you extracted the rar, that means all went well :) dont worry about the rest of the files, they were used automatically.
Now what u need to do i burn the .BIN file. using your preferred image burning tool, open the .CUE file and it will burn the .BIN file onto a CD and ur done :)
or u can use a daemon tool to mount it.

ijanawra, use UnRAR X to extract the files correctly. If the output is an image, you can mount it by double clicking it. No need for third party software for mounting it, as opposed to what you might have gotten used to under Windows.

I tried so many different things, the only thing that worked was to put them onto my Windows machine, extract one of the rar files, then to use powerISO on the bin file, which gave me all of the files which included the video, then I burned it and transferred it to my mac, which worked fine. At the risk of sounding like an idiot, I found it so complicated and annoying, maybe there's an easier way from what you all told me, but I didn't get it

I had installed Ubuntu onto a USB drive, and configured that installation in various ways. I wanted to save that installation in a compressed ISO file that I could use as backup, and when needed could burn onto other USB drives, either single-boot (via e.g., Rufus or Balena Etcher) or multiboot (via e.g., YUMI).

This post reviews several Windows tools that seemed to have the potential to convert an existing USB drive to create that compressed ISO file. Another post reviews Ubuntu tools for that same purpose. It appeared the Ubuntu tools were likely to be more useful. (A different post explores Windows tools for converting Windows USBs to Windows ISOs.)

As such, this post adds to the explorations found in an earlier post and in posts linked in it, including the most recent update. Within a focus on converting Linux (especially Ubuntu) virtual machines (VMs) to physical installations, those posts looked at Ubuntu software that seemed to offer ISO-creation capabilities. The results were not particularly encouraging. It was possible that I overlooked solutions of merit, though those seemed to be relatively thorough explorations. Various websites (e.g., Ask Ubuntu 1 2 3) had explored possible methods and difficulties in the bootable USB-to-ISO process.

The central conclusion, from the following paragraphs, was that PowerISO, DiskGenius, and other Windows 10 programs could convert the contents of an Ubuntu USB drive into an ISO file, but that ISO would have important limits. Specifically, those programs captured those contents in raw form. That is, they copied everything on the source USB drive, byte for byte, without attempting to make sense of it. The result was an ISO as large as the drive itself.

My question was about the other half of that process. Could PowerISO, running in Windows, convert the contents of a USB drive, bootable in Ubuntu, into an ISO that could then be used to create another Ubuntu-bootable USB drive?

So I went ahead with the IMG option. To my surprise, the trial version copied the entire 25GB contents of the 64GB USB drive into its IMG file. That is, there did not presently seem to be any size restrictions on that particular operation.

These results suggested that, ideally, I would find a way to produce an ISO whose size would be somewhat similar to the 25GB of actual contents. The primary issue here was compatibility, not storage space. For the latter, I found that moderately aggressive settings in WinRAR (e.g., Normal compression, 1GB dictionary, 5% recovery record) saved the 60GB ISO into a suitably named file (e.g., Bootable USB.iso.rar) of only 13GB, though it took an hour to do so on a moderately strong Intel Core i5-13500 CPU.

In short, for my purposes, two things were missing from the PowerISO approach. First, I wanted a compressed ISO capturing the contents of the USB drive in no more space than necessary; and second, through that compression or otherwise, I wanted an ISO that YUMI could handle, so as to put this USB drive into a form that I could add to other tools on a multiboot USB drive.

I had only recently discovered DiskGenius. Possibly it was still emerging: it did not yet seem to have its own Wikipedia page. Another post describes my use of DiskGenius to create a Windows To Go bootable USB drive.

To back up some USB drives, I was using AOMEI Backupper Standard (free). No doubt other backup tools would work too. AOMEI could back up a USB drive in several different ways. First, at least in its Pro version, it could make a direct clone: copy one USB drive to another. Second, AOMEI could make a backup of a running Windows drive, regardless of whether the Windows installations was on a hard or solid state drive or on a Windows To Go USB drive. Third, AOMEI could make a backup of a drive when it was not running.

For USB drives specifically, I did not have much experience with that third option, nor did I need it. I used other tools to make backups of my data drives, and I used the ISO downloads (which I used to create most of my bootable USB drives) as backups. If something went wrong with a USB drive, in most cases I could easily re-create that USB drive from the downloaded ISO.

The previous post suggested using ImgBurn to create an ISO. Although ImgBurn was venerable (final release: 2013), it still worked for burning discs. Admittedly, there were many alternatives to choose among. Users choosing an alternative may have to translate these instructions to work with their preferred tool.

It was possible that some other disc-burning tool would do a better job than ImgBurn. But since ImgBurn worked so well in so many cases, it appeared that the problem was not with ImgBurn. Rather, it seemed that something about this particular USB drive (and perhaps others like it) was incidentally or perhaps intentionally designed to foil the usual USB-to-ISO solution.

Someone suggested using USB Image Tool. That suggestion seemed off the mark. The webpage did not suggest that the tool had the desired USB2ISO capability; a comment on the webpage suggested adding such capability, implying that the capability was not already there; and I saw no such capability when I ran it. Its Backup button led to a default option to create an IMG or IMA backup image. Possibly I could have insisted on an ISO extension instead, but it seemed likely that the resulting file, whatever its name, would be nonbootable.

In EasyBoot, the Make ISO button seemed to be the one for me. It asked for my CD File directory. I entered the drive letter of the USB drive. It also requested the Boot Image. I gathered, by the supplied example, that I could look for a .bin file on the USB drive. But as I had seen with ImgBurn (above), the MemTest86 USB drive actually seemed to be booting from BOOTX64.efi. So I used that instead.

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