Forum: UltraISO
Topic: ISO-9660:1999 (version 2)
started by: bingo

Posted by bingo on Nov. 08 2004,08:44
ultraiso support ISO-9660:1999 (version 2) ? :cool:
Posted by xoben on Nov. 08 2004,09:00
Yes.
Posted by BenCd on Mar. 27 2005,15:08
Can UltraISO help me to copy selected audio tracks from different CD's to another cd without changing the audio file format? If yes, what's the instructions to do it? Thanks.

BenCd
Posted by xoben on Mar. 27 2005,18:59
CD tracks are using standard WAV format. You can do it this way:
1) Start UltraISO
2) Put your original CD to your CD-ROM, select 'File'->'Open CD/DVD'
3) All tracks will be displayed as trackxx.wav, select and extract them to an folder on hard disk
4) Repeat step 2-3, extract autio tracks from other CDs
5) Choose 'File'->'New'->'Audio CD image'
6) Add all .wav files just extracted to this image
7) Save the image to an .BIN/CUE file
8) Press F7 to burn to a new CD (CDRpack from < http://dw.ezbsys.net/cdrpack.exe > is needed if Nero is not available)
Posted by terriff on Mar. 27 2005,23:02
On this topic. I've always noticed that UltraISO allows a filename format of ISO "Max(221)".

Question: Does the Max(221) filename format refer to ISO 9660:1999?

If so, I thought the maximum length for this file system is 207, not 221. Please explain.

Thank you.
Posted by xoben on Mar. 27 2005,23:50
Quote
If so, I thought the maximum length for this file system is 207, not 221. Please explain.

Yes, the maximum filename length defined by ISO 9660:1999 is 207 characters, but modern OS either do not support ISO 9660:1999, or work with maximum filename length up to 221 characters. That's why UltraISO supports Max(221) mode.
Posted by terriff on Mar. 28 2005,12:56
So, when I create an ISO image using Max(221), what standard is being used?

What would another image program detect it as? Will there be compatibility issues?
Posted by terriff on Apr. 04 2005,12:40
Is there an answer to the previous question?

Thanks.