It could have been the cdrom and/or cdr.
If it was any Mac formatted disk (Mac Files and Folders or Mac Volume in 
Toast) or ISO9660, Joliet etc. it would be readable on a Mac.  Maybe it 
was some weird proprietary Windows format?  I dunno...I never touch PCs.

And as someone mentioned earlier, if you insert a Joliet disk in a Mac 
(without any extensions or apps added) it will read them as ISO9660.
On OSX (I think) Joliet is built-in--but don't quote me on that as I 
haven't checked.

On Tuesday, February 12, 2002, at 03:21 PM, Mark Burgess wrote:

> At 9:16 PM -0600 2/10/02, Jeff Hergan wrote:
>> Your Mac is equipped to read _any_ format of disk, whether it's 
>> created on a PC, linux, unix, whatever.
>
> I have received a few discs from clients (not etree) that I couldn't 
> read on any of our Macs. They worked fine on PC. Never did figure out 
> what the format was, unfortunately.
>
>
> -- Mark
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>
Jeffrey P. Hergan, Ph.D
Adjunct Professor of Philosophy
Saint Xavier University
Chicago
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