Im wondering if i could perhaps benefit from knowing the answers to these:1: Under what circumstances would i need the .cue file or similar files that some imaging tools create?2: What causes some disks only to allow me to create images with nothing but empty files that occupy zero bytes? (even when nero cd/dvd speed says the disk is in top shape)(this last one is a Two parter)3: Some tools like IsoBuster let me record disk images raw. When would this be the desired method to create the image? And when it encounters errors in this mode should i replace the "damaged" sectors with "dummy data" or should i select "replace with erroneous data"?Y'all are always immeasurably more informative than google
12/5/2005 12:10:16 PM
when you are trying to pirate games and make pirate copy of games.
12/5/2005 12:11:55 PM
oh yeah i forgot to mention that all of this info will be used to pirate games and expensive programs that i could easily afford but choose to steal instead
12/5/2005 12:50:09 PM
1. You never really need the cue files, but they're only like 3k so why not have them2. Anti-piracy methods3. Many anti-piracy methods create "damaged" sectors on the disk. When the game goes to check for the cd, it also checks for these sectors. Since many disk copying programs used to ignore the bad sectors and replace them, they would be missing from the disk and the game would say its not the right cd. By including the bad sectors in the disk image, you make a more exact copy of the disk in order to fool the copy protection.As for which option to choose for filling in the data, that probably depends on the specific copy protection suite. You'd have to research that yourself.
12/5/2005 1:07:48 PM
Disk images are helpful if you don't want to use a CD-R or DVD-R. Say you have a game or something and you would like to back it up (ha, right) but you think you might lose the backup or you just don't have any blank CD's lying around, you can just keep it on your hard drive and A) Burn it to CD later or B) Use Daemon Tools or Alcohol 120% to mount the image.
12/5/2005 1:16:36 PM
12/5/2005 1:50:35 PM
so a .cue contains information that cannot be found inside of the image file itself . ok.. would the program i use to burn with (whatever it may be) need to be directed to the .cue, or would it more likely matter only that the file is in the correct directory relative to the .bin,.nrg,.iso ect...
12/5/2005 4:01:41 PM
If you have a .bin and the correct .cue file, and you wanted to burn the image to a disc using nero, you would direct it to the .cue file.Make sure the .bin and .cue file are in the same folder/directory..nrg/.iso files are standalone. The dont need the .cue file because the information is already included in the file.If you had a .bin without a .cue, you have two choices:1. Convert the .bin to an .ISO/.NRG2. Create a .cue file from scratch.We done here?
12/5/2005 4:21:17 PM
12/5/2005 4:26:05 PM
so basicly its a file that says "Not me dipshit. Click the file next to me ok"
12/5/2005 7:16:15 PM