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| Thread ID: 24556 | 2002-09-13 11:15:00 | "Enhanced" Audio CD | Mike (15) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 79270 | 2002-09-13 21:24:00 | > To get it into your windows partition you could > upload it to a webhost and download it again -->> not > very nice. ah, no :) a good 300-400mb of video, so no thanks :) > Or you could burn to a CD if you have a CD writer. good idea > Or use a linux NTFS driver. I don't know if Linux will be able to access it anyway, cause I've got XP Dynamic drives set up... Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
| 79271 | 2002-09-13 22:58:00 | You could try looking at the disk with some cd writing software - should let you save the relevant sections to the hard drive, getting useful results will depend on how it was mastered in the first place I guess. | Brent P (198) | ||
| 79272 | 2002-09-13 23:40:00 | Brent, Any suggestions at what I'd look at in the cd writing software? I had a look in Nero, but all I could see was the four audio tracks. I didn't really know if there was anywhere specific to look though. I tried telling Nero that it was a multisession disk and I wanted to continue a session (thought maybe it'd load different sessions on the disk) but it just told me that the disk was not writable and wouldn't continue. Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
| 79273 | 2002-09-16 06:39:00 | What about Isobuster (www.smart-projects.net) ? It bypasses windows, and shows all filesystems on the disk. |
bmason (508) | ||
| 79274 | 2002-09-16 08:00:00 | Hmmm... I think I might just have ISOBuster somewhere - I'll take a look. Thanks for the suggestion. Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
| 79275 | 2002-09-16 22:48:00 | Brett, it worked a treat, thanks :) I did manage to access it in Linux as well, but didn't want to try to figure out how to copy over to an NTFS partition, so this has saved me heaps of time :) thanks Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
| 79276 | 2002-09-17 04:29:00 | Easy solution, Audio is the first track coz its a CD-Extra (Audio then Data for compatibility with older stereos) Hold down shift while insertinng the CD and then goto Windows Explorer and select your CD-ROM drive, there should be the Data side of it. Audio would load by default because it's the first on the CD-Extra. If playing the audio and then you wanna access the Data, you will need to eject the CD first and then re-insert it holding down the shift key. I had the same problem when making a CD-Extra for a friend, with Music Video's on the second part. Doing the above worked fine! Chilling_Silence |
Chilling_Silence (9) | ||
| 79277 | 2002-09-17 05:31:00 | > Brett, it worked a treat, thanks What worked a treat Mike? You can see all the files now, or you can play the videos on the CD, or both?! |
Susan B (19) | ||
| 79278 | 2002-09-17 21:52:00 | > Easy solution, Audio is the first track coz its a > CD-Extra (Audio then Data for compatibility with > older stereos) > Hold down shift while insertinng the CD and then goto > Windows Explorer and select your CD-ROM drive, there > should be the Data side of it. No, Chilling, this method does not work, as it's not a CD-Extra (as stated in an earlier message)... it's an enhanced audiovision CD, and the recording method is completely different (I think it's even pre-CDExtra!). Whatever way the CD is read in Windows explorer, it'll always only see it as an audio CD, until I accessed it through ISOBuster, then I could see all tracks. Interesting that both DOS and Linux can view the data first over the audio. Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
| 79279 | 2002-09-17 21:54:00 | Susan, Yes :D Mike. |
Mike (15) | ||
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