ISO files are most commonly used to create backup discs on physical CDs, DVDs or Blu-ray discs. Since the ISO file format is capable of storing a 1-1 digital replica of a physical disc, there is no compression involved since it is intended to be used as it is without extracting.

I am trying to extract a .img file (hard disk image with with Chromium OS on it). I have not been able to find any way to do this other than mounting it but that is not usable because it shows up as multiple drives so I cannot repack it.


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2. Click browse button and navigate to the image file you want to extract, and Click "Open" to select the file. AnyBurn can automatically detect image format before opening it. After the image file has been selected, click "Next" button.

3. AnyBurn will list all files and folders within the image file. You can navigate around the folders and files in the image file. To extract image file, please select files and folers need to be extracted from the list. If no file or folder is selected, all files and folders within the image file will be extracted.

I purchased a box set of Blu Rays that have 24/96 stereo and 5.1 tracks. I've created decrypted iso images, and mkv rips. However, I have not extracted the audio yet, and would like to avoid having to rip all seven of the discs a third time, as I have a slow external blu ray drive.

Is there a way to extract these tracks from the iso image or mkv rips with DVD Audio Extractor (or some other software), or am I doomed to have to repeat the ripping directly from the discs themselves? (I can boot into Windows if there is no other way.)

The current option is very limited in 2 ways - it doesn't give any information about the boot sectors, and it's misleading as it stands. Right now it lists all devices, and a save icon, and a title "extract boot image". No "browse" button, and not in the obvious place (tools menu).

So if you do find this option tucked away inside nested tabs, you're left thinking (as I did) that it saves a boot sector of the devices listed. Not that you can choose any hard drive to browse for an image file to extract the boot sector of.

What I'd like would be a dialog "Extract and save boot image" with a box and "browse" button for the source (file or device), and "save boot image..." and "cancel" buttons, and linked from the tools menu and the current location.

The other change I'd make is, just like ImgBurn checks if the settings are right for a system install disk, it can probably also check the number of sectors needed for a boot image. The boot image will be for a given OS, the files saved will often be for a given OS, and the image file will be a given size. Automating the entire boot sector side, would be nice

I'm not sure what purpose a 'browse' button would serve. The devices listed in the drop down are the only ones you can possibly extract the boot sector or create an image from. You pick the drive and click the save button, that's all there is to it. It'll then auto-populate the other fields with the correct info if you tell it to so your new disc uses the correct sizes.

Actually, Bart's BBIE utility does this if I am not mistaken? Extracting a boot image from an ISO is exactly what I needed. The only problem is, when I use the extracted file from BBIE as an input in ImgBurn, my ISO doesn't boot but when I used ImgBurn's own (.IMA), the ISO does boot! Any ideas?

They have an El-Torito descriptor in addition to the normal ISO9660 / Joliet file system descriptors and it then points to an area on the disc containing the boot catalogue which then points to the bit the bios or whatever is supposed to boot. Only the initial El-Torito descriptor is in a semi fixed place on the disc, the rest can be anywhere.

When you use it without the -b, it produces a single file image1.bin but if you add a -b, it produces two extra files: bootcatalog.bin and bootrecord.bin. Perhaps I should use one of these and see if I can get it to work.

Thanks for that, I now wonder, you see the whole purpose of using bbie would be to extract the whole "bootable" image including the bootrecord so you can make an ISO bootable but by default the program does not do this, it only extracts image1.bin without bootrecord.bin which makes it kinda of not very useful.. unless I am missing something out.

Say I have a disk image (possibly partitioned) that I have permission to read. However, I don't have permission to mount it via loopback*. In theory, the data is all there; I could write code that resembles the Linux kernel's, partition editors and mount's own code to parse the image, look for partitions, interpret the filesystem and extract a file. But does such a tool already exist for GNU/Linux systems?

7z (from p7zip) can unpack disk and filesystem images from many but not all common VM disk image, partitioning schemes, and file formats. -zip.org/ has the list (and can be used from Windows - p7zip being the Linux/Posix port)

A general approach would be to create a VM with two disk drives (files in raw mode), one being the image (given to the VM read-only) and another one for restoring the file (if you cannot use networking for transferring it).

Tick the "selected files" in "Source" option, then click "OK" to start extraction.

 It'll directly go to extract folder if you select "Current folder" or it'll go to extract the disc by selecting "Entire disc". At last, click "Ok".

After few minutes, the ISO file you need will be made successfully by WinISO. You can find the extracted file or folder on your disk. WinISO is a CD/DVD/Blu-ray Disc image file utility tool that can be as an ISO Extractor.

Archivematica supports the preservation of forensic disk images. Selecting thedisk image transfer type is not required to preservedisk images - you can use the standard transfer type or the bag transfer types,if your disk image is also bagged. The disk image transfer type gives users anextra disk image-specific metadata form where you can record information aboutthe imaging process.

Examine contents is another microservice that can result in increased processingtime, especially if it is running on the contents of an extracted forensic diskimage. If you are not extracting contents, the disk image itself is not likelyto generate any results from Bulk Extractor.

Optic disc or optic nerve (ON) head extraction in retinal images has widespread applications in retinal disease diagnosis and human identification in biometric systems. This paper introduces a fast and automatic algorithm for detecting and extracting the ON region accurately from the retinal images without the use of the blood-vessel information. In this algorithm, to compensate for the destructive changes of the illumination and also enhance the contrast of the retinal images, we estimate the illumination of background and apply an adaptive correction function on the curvelet transform coefficients of retinal images. In other words, we eliminate the fault factors and pave the way to extract the ON region exactly. Then, we detect the ON region from retinal images using the morphology operators based on geodesic conversions, by applying a proper adaptive correction function on the reconstructed image's curvelet transform coefficients and a novel powerful criterion. Finally, using a local thresholding on the detected area of the retinal images, we extract the ON region. The proposed algorithm is evaluated on available images of DRIVE and STARE databases. The experimental results indicate that the proposed algorithm obtains an accuracy rate of 100% and 97.53% for the ON extractions on DRIVE and STARE databases, respectively.

But isos made from playstation disks (I've attempted this with Final Fantasy 7) do not load in epsx emulator, even after mounting them in Nero imagedrive. I've even tried mounting them in Daemon Tools.

The file you renamed to iso actually IS an iso. The 2 files that Alcohol puts with it is some kinda extra information that Alcohol uses when burning the image back to disc. Blindwrite also makes an extra file for "subchannel data", whatever the hell that is, and I've found that I can get rid of that extra file with no ill affect. You only need it if your going to burn the image.

Alcohol 120% rocks because it has compatibility with many types of image files.. like BIN/CUE images (most used for psx), or Diskjuggler images (.CDI), and of course Clone CD (.CCD). In Alcohol it gives you the option of what type of image do you want to extract.

What I've done is to rip some of my disks with alcohol %120. I rename the .img file to an .iso. I mount them with nero image drive, and choose read from cd-rom. I could choose "open iso" but I want to "simulate" it like the disk was in the drive (whether this matters or not I don't know).

My problem is the update file is V1.0.0.130.zip. When I click on it, it puts the zip file in my downloads as a disc image file. When I get to step 8, routerlogin.net says "please assign the correct file. The file format is *.img.

So I then clicked on "how do I manually upgrade my Netgear router". First step is to go to Netgear download center. I entered the Product Name which is R7500 (not V2). The download option is "Firmware version 1.0.0.130. When I click on that it immediately downloads the box in the lower left corner titled "R7500-V1.0.0.130.zip". When I open that file it has 2 entries: R7500-V1.0.0.130, and the release notes. The file is a disc image file, and if I right click or left click, it opens the windows disc image burner. I can't get the file into a usable form.

When I open that file it has 2 entries: R7500-V1.0.0.130, and the release notes. The file is a disc image file, and if I right click or left click, it opens the windows disc image burner. I can't get the file into a usable form. 0852c4b9a8

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