

Though not updated in some time, it still works well and the developer answers questions in the forum. On Windows, my long-time favorite, ImgBurn (freeware) made it all happen using the “Create image file from disc” option. Single track, digital data only discs were fine for Linux tools. CD-audio is audio bits containing no file structure. dd won’t work either because it uses file structures (FAT, NTFS, Ext, CDFS, UDF). Popular K3B disc writing program cannot make images of audio or mixed mode discs.

cdrao (CD recorder disc-at-once) can process different disc structures but the output files were not in a format most tools understand. To meet my goal of having a raw data dump of optical media, Linux had the hardest time creating images. There are other standards such as MP3 CD, video CD, super video CD – those are all data tracks. CDs have a variety of structures: data only (Digital Data), audio only (Digital Audio), CD-TEXT (artist and song details for Digital Audio), mixed mode (data on track 1, audio on tracks 2 – n), Enhanced CD (audio for audio players, data and multimedia for computers), and multi-session (data added or modified over subsequent writes to the disc). Unlike floppy images, creating and mounting optical disc images was a hole other ball game. This month is about optical discs, copy protection and storing images for preservation.
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First talked about different media formats and last month described how to create and use floppy disk images. Last couple times, I’ve been talking about my journey to preserve legacy media. On the first tab Edit Info, verify your Email address is correct.Ĭheck the News and information from your Division Director and Section Manager box. You will be taken to the Edit Your Profile page. Updating your ARRL profile will deliver news from the section where you reside (if the leadership chooses to use this method). Those residing outside the section will need to use the mailing list link above.
#Ubuntu ham radio deluxe update
If you are an ARRL member and reside in the Ohio Section, update your mailing preferences to receive Ohio Section news in your inbox.

You do not need to be a member of the ARRL, Ohio Section, or even a ham to join the mailing list. You can receive the Journal and other Ohio Section news by joining the mailing list Tom has setup. Once my article is published in the Journal, I will also make it available on my site with a link to the published edition. It is published by the Section Manager Tom – WB8LCD and articles are submitted by cabinet members. The Section Journal covers Amateur Radio related things happening in and around the ARRL Ohio Section. One of the responsibilities of the Technical Coordinator in the Ohio Section is to submit something for the Section Journal.
