I have an .iso file that contains the windows 7 home edition and I want to make a bootable dvd to install it to my PC, I have nero burning rom 10. Is there any tutorial for this because I found this: -to-create-windows-7-bootable-dvd-using-nero/ but it is explaining about .IMA files not .ISO files! is there any difference or its the same. Maybe I didnt understand the 3d step, do I have to choose the ISO file that I have?
If the sidebar doesn't match what you see, I can't help you with Nero, as I don't use it. However, in that case you might try seeing the instructions at Click "Show me how" at Step 2 ("Burn your CD or create a bootable USB stick").
In my old age, I have decided to sell off all my books and CDs. Before I send a CD out, I test it for playability. Nero has a superb program that scans the surfaces of all optical media and provides results in terms of readable sectors. It allows me to identify the track number and, by implication, the physical location of the problem. I have been able to find and clean nearly invisible smudges this way.
as far as i know, since mint and ubuntu are both debian-based they should play nicely together. i actually use an ubuntu-based (bodhi) distro and keep ubuntu mate loaded on another partition just in case. i will try loading up in ubuntu mate since it is a fairly fresh install.
Burning a CD is not the issue. Checking the quality of commercial music CDs is the problem. I am selling all mine, and want to perform a surface scan to make sure the buyer will be happy.
Brasero works beautifully as a burner, and K3B is excellent as a ripper. But surface scans? Only DiscSpeed seems to have what I need.
@cliffsloane it occurred to me that i was looking specifically for nero.exe just because that was what the terminal said was missing when i tried to run wine nero. can you check when you run discspeed to see if perhaps the exe has some other name? and, if possible, it lives in system32 or syswow64? my guess is 32, but just to be sure
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