On Sun, 2015-10-04 at 18:47 +0200, Eric Auer wrote:
> Hi George,
>
> > If I already have a .ISO file is there a way to write it to CD in a DOS
> > only computer ?
>
> While DOS based CD burning software exists, it is probably
> easier to use the SHSUCD driver family to "mount" the ISO,
> so you
Hi George,
> If I already have a .ISO file is there a way to write it to CD in a DOS
> only computer ?
While DOS based CD burning software exists, it is probably
easier to use the SHSUCD driver family to "mount" the ISO,
so you can use it in DOS without having to burn a CD :-)
Eric
"Which Windows version? ("winver") Or did you already mention that in a
previous email?"
--- It's Windows 7, 32 bit
"I can't imagine why not. Are you trying to access a physical CD at the
same time? So you're trying to install "from" USB (but presumably read
.ZIP packages from CD)??"
--- That
Thanks for that!
On Sun, Oct 4, 2015 at 6:22 AM, Rugxulo [via FreeDOS] <
ml-node+s10956n23527...@n7.nabble.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I know this thread is old, but on the (very rare) chance that this tip
> helps,
>
> On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 4:12 PM, Rugxulo <[hidden email]
>
If I already have a .ISO file is there a way to write it to CD in a DOS
only computer ?
Regards George F.
--
___
Freedos-user mailing list
Hi,
On Sun, Oct 4, 2015 at 11:12 AM, Marlon Ng wrote:
>
> "Which Windows version? ("winver") Or did you already mention that in a
> previous email?"
>
> --- It's Windows 7, 32 bit
Okay, so you do have (limited) NTVDM, but that won't really help you
here (except as host OS for