iso is basically an image of the cd... like if someone were to take a photo of it. it stores everything there is about the cd, so that u could duplicate it based on this cd image. of course, some cd copy protection methods will still differ a copied cd from the original, most of the time, it will produce an identical copy. in most burning software, u can burn a cd from a cd image. u just point to the .iso (or .cue, etc. there are quite a few formats), and it''ll do everything else by itself.
ps. the only reason i''m saying this is because i have nothing to do atm, and i feel like answering this. next time, however, do the right thing and google it, like the previous post said. <3
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shurcool
wwdev
Visual Studio.Net 2003 or Visual Studio 6.0?
quote:Original post by Sneftelquote:Original post by ShlomiSteinbergYou must not have looked very hard, then, especially since the product box comes with a little flyer advertising the profiler.
I''m using Visual Studio .Net Enterprise Developer and I preffer it to VC6. However I think the lack of a profiler in VC .NET is very annoying as I have to download a third-party one and I haven''t find a free one yet...
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
I couldn''t find a profiler anywhere!? Are you sure there is a profiler?
"C lets you shoot yourself in the foot rather easily. C++ allows you to reuse the bullet!"
quote:Original post by ShlomiSteinberg
I couldn''t find a profiler anywhere!? Are you sure there is a profiler?
"C lets you shoot yourself in the foot rather easily. C++ allows you to reuse the bullet!"
Yeah, there''s a flyer in the product box that gives you the web address to download it. It''s made by CompuWare.
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
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