Re: 4.7 GB Gutsy Gibbon DVD Image won't fit on my 4.4 GB DVD Rom



Bill,
That's essentially what I'm doing. Roxio -- I think -- requires you
to mount an emulated volume to load the iso image into, then lets you
copy it. The point is that you get 4.9 GB of data whereas the DVD will
only hold 4.4 GB. I believe I have a very typical setup, in which case
this would be an unimaginable oversight. So, I was hoping someone
would tell me, "No, no. You have to slivel on the frimjam," and get
the Edubuntu data down to the size of my DVD.
Ion

On Jul 22, 7:47 pm, Bill Waddington <william.wadding...@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Sun, 22 Jul 2007 17:01:55 -0000, ion <ionFree...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Help! I'm new to burning DVDs in general, so there could be something
pretty obvious I'm missing here. I'm using Windows XP.
I have a Mad Dog MetaSTOR DVD burner, and Memorex 4.7 GB DVD+RW
rewriteable disks.
I downloaded Edubuntu Gutsy Gibbon, based on Ubuntu 7.10. As this page
shows, this is a 4.9 GB iso file.
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/edubuntu/dvd/current/
I loaded my downloaded iso file into an emulated drive using Roxio's
Disk Image Loader.
I fired up Roxio Creator 8.2 XE and put a disk in the MegaSTOR. The
disk capacity is reported as 4.4 GB. I go to Data/Copy Disk, selected
my emulated drive as 'copy from' and the MegaSTOR as 'copy to'.
Of course, this fails. There's not enough space. Windows Explorer
reports the size of the emulated drive as 4.87 GB.
Am I dead in the water here? Should I just download the CD images and
burn those onto my DVDs? I find it a little suspicious that this very
popular operating system's DVD image is larger than my very standard
DVD. The image itself is only 3.62 GB, so I wonder if I can't squeeze
it onto my DVD somehow.

The above looks waaay to complicated to work :) How about just fire
up your Roxio burning software, select "burn from image" or equivalent,
and point it at the iso?

Maybe _I'm_ missing something obvious here...

Bill
--
William D Waddington
william.wadding...@xxxxxxxxxx
"Even bugs...are unexpected signposts on
the long road of creativity..." - Ken Burtch


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