I have used Roxio as well as a few other CD writing packages. You can usually just double click the name of the ISO file in Windows Explorer. If associations have been set correctly, it will open the CD writing application and you can just write the image to disk. Otherwise, most apps I have seem have a facility to select and write the image to CD.
From: John Thompson JohnThompson@new.rr.com Reply-To: For users of Fedora Core releases fedora-list@redhat.com To: fedora-list@redhat.com Subject: Re: Simple ISO Question Date: Sun, 28 Mar 2004 13:47:04 -0600
On Thu, 11 Mar 2004 13:10:52 -0500 Mike Yurick myurick@city.peterborough.on.ca wrote:
This is a simple question, but I cannot figure it out. I have downloaded all 3 ISO files to my computer. I've created my bootdisk. Now I want to create the CDs required to install Linux onto a computer. But I cannot figure this out.
I realize the ISO images have to be created in a different format than data or audio. Do I need a special program for this? I am using Win2K, and want to install Linux on an x86 compatible computer. Can anyone help me out with this?
I'm not at all familiar with Windows CD burning software, but you should be able to use whatever software you currently use to burn CDs and tell it to simply burn the ISO image straight to the CD (not as a file, but as a CD image).
--
-John (JohnThompson@new.rr.com)
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you can also try Nero (trial version at least). that worked well with no effort.