Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I have a CD with various programms in it.It's a data CD with 700 Mb capacity. When I right click on the CD in My computer, it says 693Mb total disk space. But when I browse the CD and select all the files and then right click properties, it says they are 1Gbyte!!!

I confirmed that by copying the CD to my hard disk (copy -paste). It took up 1 Gbyte of hd space!!!

So , what's the deal? Is there a way to create compressed images and fit in 1 cd-r80 more than 700Mb of executable (not zipped) files ?


Posted

with CDImage you can create a CD where identical files in different directories take up space only once. For instance you could have XP Home and XP Pro on the same CD, since many files will be the same for the two. It only works for identical files though, no compression or anything

http://unattended.msfn.org

You can grab cdimage somewhere on that site, along with instructions on how to do it.

Posted

i downloaded a dvd iso image which is a multi-boot windows disk... it had tonnes of windows versions on it...

i extracted the 4.35gb ISO file onto my hard drive to look at how they made it... it took up almost 10gb of space! :)

Posted

oh he can post about it. I wouldn't go around bragging though, or link, or anything of that sort.

I have the same disc, but like him I used it to see how they made the disc. It comes in handy sometimes. I don't install anything from it, just to see how they got it to work, so I can get mine working as well.

it really irritates me how people think it's compression. Guess we'll just have to educate them all. There is some compression utilities outthere I believe, but none that would get that mcuh.....

Posted

I've seen a 44GB CD... Kinda useless because it was pretty much the same file over and over again, but then again, proofs of concept can be like that :)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...