Dec 22, 2020, 19:11 pm
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Dec 22, 2020, 19:14 pm
maybe this is out of topic. but i need to know, what is UDF?
Dec 22, 2020, 19:40 pm
Off the top of my head, a file system used for optical discs.
Don't quote me, duckduckgo it yourself (don't Google! )
Don't quote me, duckduckgo it yourself (don't Google! )
Dec 22, 2020, 22:57 pm
I'll be checking out cdrtfe. A brief glance looks interesting, but not showing file system options.
File systems are important mainly for allowing file title lengths.
Legacy optical file systems are ISO9660 and Joliet. Both can munge long file names.
UDF is an updated system with Unicode and much larger title lengths. It is however an M$ standard, and its use on Linux appears to be limited on software even if the kernels support it.
Imgburn (Win) has it, but not by default. It must be set.
File systems are important mainly for allowing file title lengths.
Legacy optical file systems are ISO9660 and Joliet. Both can munge long file names.
UDF is an updated system with Unicode and much larger title lengths. It is however an M$ standard, and its use on Linux appears to be limited on software even if the kernels support it.
Imgburn (Win) has it, but not by default. It must be set.
Dec 22, 2020, 23:06 pm
You might want to use the settings panels to make file system choices. I use ISO9660 Level 4 if i was to burn software compilations (a mix of freeware, GPL, and cracked commercial software).
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