Thanks. mkisofs -J worked just as advertised, at least on windows98. I haven't been using this software long (cdrecord, mkisofs), but, it's really a pleasure to have a command line to burn CD's. Point and click stuff is just too aggravating.
Does xcdroast offer any advantages? Joel Fri, Dec 06, 2002 at 12:52:57PM -0500, Net Llama! wrote: > RR & Joliet are both supported via the kernel in linux. So, as long as > you have kernel support (and most do from the distro vendors) you should > be fine. I can't comment on windoze, i don't use it. > > On Fri, 6 Dec 2002, Joel Hammer wrote: > > > I want to burn CD's that can be used by non-linux OS's > > (win95/98/2000/XP). > > > > I only have win98 available with which to fool. I burned a CD with the > > Rock Ridge scheme (mkisofs -r), and that worked fine for linux but the > > win98 machine shows only the 8.3 names. (If I put the CD into the linux > > box, and share it with samba, the win98 machine sees the full name.) > > > > So, it seems I may need the Joliet naming convention, at least for my > > version of windows98. > > > > Will using the Joliet scheme cause difficulties with other flavors of > > windows or with linux? _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc -> http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
