How does imgburn work

Author: c | 2025-04-23

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ImgBurn is a burning tool that can be used for several kinds of media such as CDs, DVDs, and HD DVDs. How does ImgBurn work? Using ImgBurn can be confusing at Does ImgBurn work with floppy drives? qualegonna posted a topic in ImgBurn Support. Does ImgBurn work with floppy drives? Thanks ; 1 reply All Activity;

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Does ImgBurn work on Windows 11? - Chat - ImgBurn Support

Quote: Originally Posted by LCT1000 Thanks for your help so far guys. Okay, the files vary. On my Windows Laptop I've used MKV's, MP4's and MPEG2's and the jittering happened on all of them. So far on my Mac I've only tried MKV's so I don't know if it happens on Mac with the other files as of yet. I have tired VOB files and they work perfectly. The files are all downloaded from the internet and they are 720p or 1080p files. I'm viewing the discs on my Blu-ray player, as well as on my Macbook. I hope this information helps!Can Imgburn use MKV, MP4 files? Can it make menus etc? Imgburn does not author disc. DVD Authoring and Blu-ray authoring is not that different in idea. After all its round with a hole in it? But things are deff different. Off the top of my head I believe that the folder/ file, structure/ heirarchy is completely different.If Imgburn detects the media files that belong to a partiuclar type of media, imgburn will suggest the way it should handle those files. And it will burn them accordingly. But AFAIK it has more to do with the folder structure than than the media that Imgburn detects. I know you are thinking that I just said Imgburn can not but a few lines later i mention that it can. Imgburn can not author a disc because A) it does not create menus B) you have to make sure your files are encoded in whatever format that makes it compliant for blus. I haven't done authoring or post production work for ages but I'm pretty sure throwing some avis, mkvs, etc into imgburn will not fly. When you state that you use VOB files and they work perfectly it really does explain a lot mainly because VOB files are already encoded for you in a manner that makes them DVD compliant. What Imgburn can do is burn the disc or the create the disc img, essentially burning a image of the disc on your hard drive.What are you using to encode/ burn/ author your files on your windows computer? Quote: Originally Posted by wvl For converting video files, I would recommend Wondershare software. It does a pretty good job. However, Imgburn only supports ISO files. I believe that is all it knows. During your burns, are there any other processing running on the system/s? If you are running other apps during the burn, this will cause problems for the finish results. If your files play without an issue from your systems, then there is nothing wrong with your video files. But if your burns are jerky, jittery, skipping or freezing, then it would suggest your systems do not have the required resources to burn. First thing to determine is if you have the resources to burn without the systems starving for more resources during a burn. If you have high CPU, RAM or HDD usage during a burn, then you will need

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Burned DVD does not work - ImgBurn Support - ImgBurn Support

Forum Video DVD Ripping CloneDVD vs ImgBurn vs Others Thread--> Member I’ve been trying out CloneDVD as it comes highly recommended to me, but I’ve been largely disappointed with it. The first copy I made didn’t play correctly in VLC player, but did play on PowerDVD. The second issue is with the layer break. I’ve been told numerous times by numerous people CloneDVD preserves the layer break of the original media, but that is not my experience. I checked a couple of DVDs and the original layer break was very different to what CloneDVD stated. ImgBurn on the other hand picked it up perfectly.I tried to treble-check with IFOedit and PGCEdit, but I don’t know how to work it out from them. Any help would be appreciated?Thirdly CloneDVD did not make perfect ISOs of the disc.Sorry for the long winded introduction, but my question is… in conjunction with a copy protection remover, does ImgBurn deal with Structural Protection ok? Are there any downsides to ImgBurn or indeed another program even better? I believe DVD fab preserves the layer break, but I haven't checked that out yet… Member I don't think imgburn has any protection removing capabilities, neither read nor write Member Use DVD Passkey and then IMGBurn if needed. For me I no longer deal with handling and playing physical material other than ripping to MKV the main movie. SONY 75" Full array 200Hz LED TV, Yamaha A1070 amp, Zidoo UHD3000, BeyonWiz PVR V2 (Enigma2 clone), Chromecast, Windows 11 Professional, QNAP NAS TS851 Member CloneDVD despite it's name is not a 1:1 copying program it's used for shrinking and customizing DVDs. If your goal is to make 1:1 copies of a DVD (and remove structure protection when present) the best is AnyDVD (passkey works too but I like Redfox's tool

Full Erase does not work - ImgBurn Support - ImgBurn Support

Forum Video Audio From FLAC to CD Audio Thread--> Member Hi there, I have an album encoded in FLAC + CUE, there are 2 CDs. How can I burn them into a CD Audio? I have to convert them before? Banned I don't use it for this purpose, but I'm sure that ImgBurn can burn an audio CD for you from the FLAC and CUE files. You shouldn't need to convert. Follow this guide and open the CUE file with ImgBurn you have Nero, Nero can also burn audio CDs from CUE files or just the FLAC files. Member I have to download another software, can't I do it with Ashampoo? Member I use ImgBurn version 2.5.0.0, it's adware free and still the BEST burner available today: Member OK, I've downloaded the 2.5.0.0 version, clicked on Write image file to disc...... and selected the .cue file, but I get this error. Banned I don't have the patience or time to walk you through the fix for this. Sorry. Maybe someone else does. If not, then you'll have to convert the FLAC files to WAV and burn those with whatever CD audio software you have. I can't help you with Ashampoo - never used it. A Member since June, 2004 Download and install FLAC Frontend. Run it and click 'Add files'. Load your FLAC file. Click 'Decode'. It should create a WAV file with the same name and in the same folder as your FLAC.Open your CUE file with NOTEPAD and edit the line beginning with FILE... changing the file extension to .WAV instead of .FLAC. Save the CUE file. Now you can use virtually any burning software that burns images. Choose burn image and point to your CUE file. You can use ImgBurn as you did before. This time it. ImgBurn is a burning tool that can be used for several kinds of media such as CDs, DVDs, and HD DVDs. How does ImgBurn work? Using ImgBurn can be confusing at Does ImgBurn work with floppy drives? qualegonna posted a topic in ImgBurn Support. Does ImgBurn work with floppy drives? Thanks ; 1 reply All Activity;

How does verify work= - ImgBurn Support Forum

If you want to burn Blu-ray discs then you need a Blu-ray burner.BDAV/BDMV folders are what you'd have if you had the proper files for burning a Blu-ray video disc.So if you have mpeg4 and wmv files, you don't have that - yet.You can probably find a tool to convert those files into the correct format for burning as a Blu-ray Video disc, but it's not something ImgBurn can do.Thanxx for that, Lightning. Your skills, knowledge & experience in these matters make you a great asset to this Forum. I'm sure a lot of people on the Forum, myself included, appreciate that very much!Back to the matter of Blu-ray burning (which I am very keen to try):(a) I have printed somebody's full instructions on writing a "Blu-ray Video disc" using ImgBurn. I'm assuming this "Video disc" is the same as a recordable BD-R, BD-RE, or even the double-layer BD-R. Would the procedure be the same for burning a 3D Blu-ray disc?( Like I said, I have a whole lot of mpeg-4 & wmv video files (which I used to burn onto DVD-R discs successfully using ImgBurn). You said I need to convert these mpeg-4 & wmv files to their Blu-ray equivalents. Are these equivalents the BDAV/BDMV files you mentioned? [Where does the CERTIFICATE folder come from?]. Any idea what suitable software does the necessary conversion?© I understand that commercially produced true 3D Blu ray movies have been shot with 3 cameras to give the depth & layers necessary for 3D rendering by 3D Blu ray players. The mpeg4 & wmv videos I have are obviously NOT shot with 3 cameras (many look as though only 1 camera had been used). How does this figure in the 3D scheme of things? IF I do manage to burn my video files onto 3D Blu ray discs, and when I playback thro' my standalone Bluray 3D player, would the picture on my 3D HD TV screen look a little 3D (like "simulated"), but not quite true 3D?(d) I'm buying a ASUS BW-12D1S 3D Bluray external burner. I'm not sure IF it comes with any burning software (probably not). Can ImgBurn still work with it?Thanxx again, Lightning, you're a champ!

Does DVDInfoPro work for all BD drives? - ImgBurn General - ImgBurn

My first post on this site should sum things up for you but in regards to ImgBurn 'got stuck at the splash screen' simply boils down to you need to change Wine from it's default of Windows 7 mode to Windows XP mode (i.e. through 'Configure Wine' in your Linux OS's menu, or use 'winecfg' from terminal) and it will no longer get stuck on the splash screen and will start up. but depending on what Wine version your using you may have to use the 'SPTI' option in ImgBurn's settings for it to see your CD/DVD burners (see my link above for more info). but basically... Wine v5 or newer (currently Wine v7 is the newest) requires you to use 'SPTI' in ImgBurn's settings. but if your using Wine v4 or older you don't need to use that option on ImgBurn as it's default ASPI mode will detect your CD/DVD drives. but if you use say Wine v2.0.5 with ImgBurn you won't even have to change from Windows 7 to Windows XP since it defaults to Windows XP right off the start (although, like I talked about in that link, the fonts look a bit weird compared to say Wine v4.0.4 which looks a bit better although Wine v2.0.5 will still work as I briefly played with Wine v2.0.5 through PlayOnLinux). p.s. but as far as a native Linux burning program... Xfburn (sudo apt install xfburn) is a pretty good basic burning program on Linux (as it does basic data, audio CD, and can burn ISO's) as it's what I was using until I learned more details on how to get ImgBurn working. but I do notice in regards to Xfburn, if it seems to not work at times, click the 'refresh' icon and it will likely cure it not seeing your burner or starting a burn etc. but if you want to overburn a audio CD for example Xfburn won't do that as, playing around a bit a while ago, 'cdrecord' works (i.e. sudo apt install wodim) as pretty much the exact command I used was "cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -overburn -dao -pad -audio /location/to/wavfiles/*.wav" ; as you can see I used wav files as these will just work as you don't have to worry about conversion. but if you need to convert I suggest using Foobar2000, which is one of the major reasons I got Wine installed since it's flat out better than any native Linux music player since it plays audio well and can convert between audio formats well like from my original FLAC files back to WAV etc. but in regards to Foobar2000 I suggest setting it up through PlayOnLinux using '6.13-staging' version of Wine. Edited

How does the verify option work? - ImgBurn Support Forum

New 04 May 2010 #1 How can I burn a CD in ISO9660 format under Windows 7? Hi, I need to create a firmware update CD-R for my Blu-ray player. The instructions state that the downloaded firmware update file must be written to a CD-R in ISO9660 format. As far as I can gather, Windows 7 does not support this format. If I simply copy the file to the CD-R using Windows Explorer, the resulting file doesn't appear to be ISO9660 format. Can anyone advise me on how to achieve this? Do I need to get some different CD writer software? Any info much appreciated. :) New 04 May 2010 #2 I recommend you get ImgBurn. It is third party and free.Unlike most modern operating systems, Windows still doesn't provide a built in method to do this. But at least we have Aero-shake. New 04 May 2010 #3 Wreck said: I recommend you get ImgBurn. It is third party and free.Unlike most modern operating systems, Windows still doesn't provide a built in method to do this. But at least we have Aero-shake. Actually, ,W7 does have a built in ISO burner. However, you cannot choose the format.~Lordbob

why does it not work - ImgBurn Support Forum

When you keep saying ImgBurn is not dead, yet, no updates since 2013. Its BS, no software developer let the app go without even small improvement for that long and ImgBurn definitely has few bugs, even if they are aesthetic bugs, you don't shove bug under the rug, that could have been fixed years ago. I still have a ton of DVDs and CDs and I will use optical drives for years to come, in fact I just got 300 Verbatim AZO DVDs and 200 Verbatim CDs and I've been using PowerISO as it does really great job, but I have to admit I still like ImgBurn but will refuse to use dead software I can't get around the idea that e.g. 1.when launching ImgBurn on windows 10, log window is always separated by a bit from main ImgBurn window on my BenQ 4K monitor and you can't join them don't matter what. 2. it shows I’m on windows 8 pro and this was promised to be fixed 3 years ago I remember…BS So! When you say there is nothing to fix…..phhhh, there is always something to improve. Call me crazy, but I’m thinking that someone else is running this long dead software and forum and pretending to be the org. developer and whomever that is, has no clue how to fix the bugs, because these there is no way, no way even if someone is extremely busy in their personal life’s would leave this for that long…promises...promises, but once. ImgBurn is a burning tool that can be used for several kinds of media such as CDs, DVDs, and HD DVDs. How does ImgBurn work? Using ImgBurn can be confusing at

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ImgBurn v2.4.4.0 does it work or make coasters?

. disc-burning tool. What ImgBurn does is simplify what can be a complicated, error-prone process.. Current version: 2 . 5.8 . 0. Released: 16th June 2013. 2 . 5.6 . 0, Released: Tuesday 4th October 2011, Take me to the top, baby! ImgBurn is a lightweight CD.. 16th June 2013, 10:40 PM #1 Arthur. Arthur is offline . ImgBurn v2.5.8.0 . Added: Pioneer drives now list their 'Kernel Version' next to the firmware version.. 16 Jun 2013 . By LIGHTNING UK!, June 16, 2013 in Announcements . Apparently, the new version of ImgBurn tries to install crapware during the upgrade. . Thanks to technology the last time I burned a disc was a few years ago, I have.. 16 Jun 2013 . ImgBurn carries on from where DVD Decrypter left off! (Well, for the . Version history 16 Jun 2013ImgBurn v2.5.8.0(Latest stable version).. As of version 2.3.0.0, ImgBurn can create image files from unencrypted CDs/DVDs; . The OpenCandy adware version of the ImgBurn installer (v2.5.8.0) distributed . Archived from the original on June 3, 2011. . 2015-11-16. . Microsoft Windows - The latest current version of Windows CE, Windows Embedded Compact 7,.. Since last summer I use ImgBurn to burn DVD's. I never experienced any . ImgBurn v2.5.8.0 (3,882 KB) Released: Sunday 16th June 2013

ImgBurn does not close - ImgBurn Bugs - ImgBurn Support Forum

Recommended Posts When I rip a DVD with DVDFab and want to shrink the files to fit a single-layer disc, I use DVD Shrink. This used to give me the option of burning with IMGBurn but now it offers only the option to write an ISO file to the HD. How do I restore the IMGBurn option? You have the same version of DVD Shrink installed as you had before (the one that supports ImgBurn)? ImgBurn is installed? If the above, try to reinstall DVD Shrink. Author Posted October 20, 2010 You have the same version of DVD Shrink installed as you had before (the one that supports ImgBurn)? ImgBurn is installed? If the above, try to reinstall DVD Shrink.I've done this before - it works the first time but not after subsequent start-ups. Installed the programs in the default directories? Author Posted October 21, 2010 Installed the programs in the default directories?Yep. If I recall the installation of the "fixed" version that allows to burn wiht ImgBurn, is that you first need to install the "old one that burns with DVD Decrypter" and then copy the one from VideHelp (the one that burns with ImgBurn) over the existing one - dvdshrink.exe Author Posted October 21, 2010 If I recall the installation of the "fixed" version that allows to burn wiht ImgBurn, is that you first need to install the "old one that burns with DVD Decrypter" and then copy the one from VideHelp (the one that burns with ImgBurn). ImgBurn is a burning tool that can be used for several kinds of media such as CDs, DVDs, and HD DVDs. How does ImgBurn work? Using ImgBurn can be confusing at

Does ImgBurn Shrink? - ImgBurn Support - ImgBurn Support Forum

Titles you don't need.Step 5. Choose the target and then the output size (DVD or DVD DL), and then press the Start button.Note: You can try 2 DVDs if you don't purchase a license.Way 4. Copy DVD to Hard Drive with Imgburn [Homemade DVDs]Imgburn is a well-known disc authoring, copying, and burning tool that is available to Windows users.It can be effortless to burn DVDs to harddrive with Imgburn if your DVDs are free of copy protection of the DVD. I prefer Imgburn as a burning tool to burn home DVDs to blank DVDs for playback on standalone DVD players when the source can fit a single-layer DVD5 disc.Pros Freeware and stable. Straightforward UI.Cons Cannot remove Copy protections. Does not support compression.How to Copy DVDs to Harddrive Using Imgburn:Step 1. Download and install Imgburn on your computer and launch it.Step 2. Insert a home DVD into the PC drive.Step 3. Pick the mode "Create Image file from disc".Step 4. Select the source from the corresponding drive, and browse for the destination.Step 5. Hit the Start button at the lower area to begin copying DVD to hard drive.How to Copy DVD to harddrive on MacIn this section, I will introduce two methods, one specifically for making homemade DVDs, and the other that can be used to work with commercial DVDs, that is, copy-protected DVDs.#1. Copy DVD to harddrive Mac with Disk UtilityDisk Utility is an app that comes with the Mac system, with it, you don't need to install additional software to copy DVD to hard drive, this is especially for homemade DVDs that do not contain any copy protection.Step 1. Insert a DVD into the drive connected to your Mac. You will see the disk icon with its volume name on the desktop.Step 2. Search the Disk Utility in Finder and open it, select the disk from the connected device in the sidebar.Step 3. Choose "File > New Image", then choose “Image from [device name].”Step 4. Set a filename for the disk image and choose where you want to save it. If you don't need to compress the disk, click the "DVD/CD master" option from the format menu. You can also select the encryption option to encrypt the disk image. However, I suggest leaving this encryption unselected.Step 5. Click "Save", then click "Done".#2. Copy DVD to Harddrive Mac with DVDFab DVD Copy for MacDVDFab DVD Copy can handle commercial DVDs

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User9658

Quote: Originally Posted by LCT1000 Thanks for your help so far guys. Okay, the files vary. On my Windows Laptop I've used MKV's, MP4's and MPEG2's and the jittering happened on all of them. So far on my Mac I've only tried MKV's so I don't know if it happens on Mac with the other files as of yet. I have tired VOB files and they work perfectly. The files are all downloaded from the internet and they are 720p or 1080p files. I'm viewing the discs on my Blu-ray player, as well as on my Macbook. I hope this information helps!Can Imgburn use MKV, MP4 files? Can it make menus etc? Imgburn does not author disc. DVD Authoring and Blu-ray authoring is not that different in idea. After all its round with a hole in it? But things are deff different. Off the top of my head I believe that the folder/ file, structure/ heirarchy is completely different.If Imgburn detects the media files that belong to a partiuclar type of media, imgburn will suggest the way it should handle those files. And it will burn them accordingly. But AFAIK it has more to do with the folder structure than than the media that Imgburn detects. I know you are thinking that I just said Imgburn can not but a few lines later i mention that it can. Imgburn can not author a disc because A) it does not create menus B) you have to make sure your files are encoded in whatever format that makes it compliant for blus. I haven't done authoring or post production work for ages but I'm pretty sure throwing some avis, mkvs, etc into imgburn will not fly. When you state that you use VOB files and they work perfectly it really does explain a lot mainly because VOB files are already encoded for you in a manner that makes them DVD compliant. What Imgburn can do is burn the disc or the create the disc img, essentially burning a image of the disc on your hard drive.What are you using to encode/ burn/ author your files on your windows computer? Quote: Originally Posted by wvl For converting video files, I would recommend Wondershare software. It does a pretty good job. However, Imgburn only supports ISO files. I believe that is all it knows. During your burns, are there any other processing running on the system/s? If you are running other apps during the burn, this will cause problems for the finish results. If your files play without an issue from your systems, then there is nothing wrong with your video files. But if your burns are jerky, jittery, skipping or freezing, then it would suggest your systems do not have the required resources to burn. First thing to determine is if you have the resources to burn without the systems starving for more resources during a burn. If you have high CPU, RAM or HDD usage during a burn, then you will need

2025-04-01
User1151

Forum Video DVD Ripping CloneDVD vs ImgBurn vs Others Thread--> Member I’ve been trying out CloneDVD as it comes highly recommended to me, but I’ve been largely disappointed with it. The first copy I made didn’t play correctly in VLC player, but did play on PowerDVD. The second issue is with the layer break. I’ve been told numerous times by numerous people CloneDVD preserves the layer break of the original media, but that is not my experience. I checked a couple of DVDs and the original layer break was very different to what CloneDVD stated. ImgBurn on the other hand picked it up perfectly.I tried to treble-check with IFOedit and PGCEdit, but I don’t know how to work it out from them. Any help would be appreciated?Thirdly CloneDVD did not make perfect ISOs of the disc.Sorry for the long winded introduction, but my question is… in conjunction with a copy protection remover, does ImgBurn deal with Structural Protection ok? Are there any downsides to ImgBurn or indeed another program even better? I believe DVD fab preserves the layer break, but I haven't checked that out yet… Member I don't think imgburn has any protection removing capabilities, neither read nor write Member Use DVD Passkey and then IMGBurn if needed. For me I no longer deal with handling and playing physical material other than ripping to MKV the main movie. SONY 75" Full array 200Hz LED TV, Yamaha A1070 amp, Zidoo UHD3000, BeyonWiz PVR V2 (Enigma2 clone), Chromecast, Windows 11 Professional, QNAP NAS TS851 Member CloneDVD despite it's name is not a 1:1 copying program it's used for shrinking and customizing DVDs. If your goal is to make 1:1 copies of a DVD (and remove structure protection when present) the best is AnyDVD (passkey works too but I like Redfox's tool

2025-04-16
User6641

If you want to burn Blu-ray discs then you need a Blu-ray burner.BDAV/BDMV folders are what you'd have if you had the proper files for burning a Blu-ray video disc.So if you have mpeg4 and wmv files, you don't have that - yet.You can probably find a tool to convert those files into the correct format for burning as a Blu-ray Video disc, but it's not something ImgBurn can do.Thanxx for that, Lightning. Your skills, knowledge & experience in these matters make you a great asset to this Forum. I'm sure a lot of people on the Forum, myself included, appreciate that very much!Back to the matter of Blu-ray burning (which I am very keen to try):(a) I have printed somebody's full instructions on writing a "Blu-ray Video disc" using ImgBurn. I'm assuming this "Video disc" is the same as a recordable BD-R, BD-RE, or even the double-layer BD-R. Would the procedure be the same for burning a 3D Blu-ray disc?( Like I said, I have a whole lot of mpeg-4 & wmv video files (which I used to burn onto DVD-R discs successfully using ImgBurn). You said I need to convert these mpeg-4 & wmv files to their Blu-ray equivalents. Are these equivalents the BDAV/BDMV files you mentioned? [Where does the CERTIFICATE folder come from?]. Any idea what suitable software does the necessary conversion?© I understand that commercially produced true 3D Blu ray movies have been shot with 3 cameras to give the depth & layers necessary for 3D rendering by 3D Blu ray players. The mpeg4 & wmv videos I have are obviously NOT shot with 3 cameras (many look as though only 1 camera had been used). How does this figure in the 3D scheme of things? IF I do manage to burn my video files onto 3D Blu ray discs, and when I playback thro' my standalone Bluray 3D player, would the picture on my 3D HD TV screen look a little 3D (like "simulated"), but not quite true 3D?(d) I'm buying a ASUS BW-12D1S 3D Bluray external burner. I'm not sure IF it comes with any burning software (probably not). Can ImgBurn still work with it?Thanxx again, Lightning, you're a champ!

2025-04-17
User4689

My first post on this site should sum things up for you but in regards to ImgBurn 'got stuck at the splash screen' simply boils down to you need to change Wine from it's default of Windows 7 mode to Windows XP mode (i.e. through 'Configure Wine' in your Linux OS's menu, or use 'winecfg' from terminal) and it will no longer get stuck on the splash screen and will start up. but depending on what Wine version your using you may have to use the 'SPTI' option in ImgBurn's settings for it to see your CD/DVD burners (see my link above for more info). but basically... Wine v5 or newer (currently Wine v7 is the newest) requires you to use 'SPTI' in ImgBurn's settings. but if your using Wine v4 or older you don't need to use that option on ImgBurn as it's default ASPI mode will detect your CD/DVD drives. but if you use say Wine v2.0.5 with ImgBurn you won't even have to change from Windows 7 to Windows XP since it defaults to Windows XP right off the start (although, like I talked about in that link, the fonts look a bit weird compared to say Wine v4.0.4 which looks a bit better although Wine v2.0.5 will still work as I briefly played with Wine v2.0.5 through PlayOnLinux). p.s. but as far as a native Linux burning program... Xfburn (sudo apt install xfburn) is a pretty good basic burning program on Linux (as it does basic data, audio CD, and can burn ISO's) as it's what I was using until I learned more details on how to get ImgBurn working. but I do notice in regards to Xfburn, if it seems to not work at times, click the 'refresh' icon and it will likely cure it not seeing your burner or starting a burn etc. but if you want to overburn a audio CD for example Xfburn won't do that as, playing around a bit a while ago, 'cdrecord' works (i.e. sudo apt install wodim) as pretty much the exact command I used was "cdrecord dev=/dev/sr0 -v -overburn -dao -pad -audio /location/to/wavfiles/*.wav" ; as you can see I used wav files as these will just work as you don't have to worry about conversion. but if you need to convert I suggest using Foobar2000, which is one of the major reasons I got Wine installed since it's flat out better than any native Linux music player since it plays audio well and can convert between audio formats well like from my original FLAC files back to WAV etc. but in regards to Foobar2000 I suggest setting it up through PlayOnLinux using '6.13-staging' version of Wine. Edited

2025-04-06

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