|
| | |||||||
| Apple Macintosh Hardware Discuss the Apple Macintosh Hardware |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| |||
| reading Mac CD on Windows XP I have burned a set of about 50 CDs containing about 20 GB of data. These were written using Adaptec Toast on a Mac Powerbook G3 running OS 8.x and a Mac Powerbook G4 running OS 9.x. I have successfully copied these CDs to an eMac running Mac OS X (10.2.6). The CDs were written in ISO 9660 format. However when I try to copy these CDs to a Windows XP systems, some of the files won't be copied. The really frustrating thing is that once the XP system won't copy a particular file it stops the copying process and won't copy anything else on the CD. Of course I can manually go through the fairly complex folder structure and copy individual files or folders but that will be a long process for 50 CDs. I've used Adaptec Toast on the G3 to identify file names on one of the CDs which do not meet Joliet requirements and modified them on the eMac before burning a new CD. I still have problems, however. Some files whose names seem OK (all letters, digits, and spaces) still cannot be copied. One error message I receive is "Cannot find the specified path. Make sure you specify the correct path." Another is "Cannot read from the source file or disk." Also some files (for example some mail files created using AOL 4 or 5) can't be opened once they are on the Windows system. (I've tried to open them directly from within AOL 8.0 or Word or WordPad without success.) I've looked at the Microsoft and Apple web sites but haven't found any solution. Any advice? |
| |||
| Re: reading Mac CD on Windows XP you can try a utility called: MacDrive - I think the current version is 5 this 'teaches' winblows to read a mac formatted cd - this might solve the issue. David C. wrote: > fvanscoy@wvu.edu (Frances L. Van Scoy) writes: > >>I have burned a set of about 50 CDs containing about 20 GB of data. >>These were written using Adaptec Toast on a Mac Powerbook G3 running >>OS 8.x and a Mac Powerbook G4 running OS 9.x. I have successfully >>copied these CDs to an eMac running Mac OS X (10.2.6). The CDs were >>written in ISO 9660 format. > > > Why ISO 9660 format? I always burn with "Mac OS Extended and PC > (Hybrid) CD". This provides the Joliet extensions that Windows uses > for long filenames and other things. > > >>However when I try to copy these CDs to a Windows XP systems, some >>of the files won't be copied. The really frustrating thing is that >>once the XP system won't copy a particular file it stops the copying >>process and won't copy anything else on the CD. Of course I can >>manually go through the fairly complex folder structure and copy >>individual files or folders but that will be a long process for 50 >>CDs. > > > Windows XP is brain-dead. It's CD driver seems to choke on anything > other than Microsoft's own proprietary format (aka Joliet). > > >>I've used Adaptec Toast on the G3 to identify file names on one of >>the CDs which do not meet Joliet requirements and modified them on >>the eMac before burning a new CD. I still have problems, however. >>Some files whose names seem OK (all letters, digits, and spaces) >>still cannot be copied. One error message I receive is "Cannot find >>the specified path. Make sure you specify the correct path." >>Another is "Cannot read from the source file or disk." Also some >>files (for example some mail files created using AOL 4 or 5) can't >>be opened once they are on the Windows system. (I've tried to open >>them directly from within AOL 8.0 or Word or WordPad without >>success.) > > > What about the total path length. > > I remember that back in the MS-DOS days, if the total pathname to a > file (drive letter, path and filename) would be longer than 64 > characters, it wouldn't open. I think the limit was increased in > later versions of the OS, but I think there is still a limit like > this. Files that exist underneath a deep nest of directories may be > unreadable because of this. > > >>Any advice? > > > Try burning with the hybrid format, if you haven't already tried. > Otherwise, I can't think of anything. Normally, when I have to > transfer anything from my Mac to my PC, I do it over the LAN. > > The CDs that I've burned (using the hybrid format from Toast) seem to > work OK on the Windows systems I use every day (95, 98, NT4 and 2000). > > -- David |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Windows Explorer is not reading desktop.ini | Dave | Windows XP | 0 | 10-07-2007 12:00 PM |
| MS Works 6.0 for Windows ME/reading in Vista | KD for Van | Windows Vista | 0 | 10-02-2007 07:20 AM |
| Trouble reading DVD's in Windows PE | Vista | Windows Vista | 0 | 06-23-2007 09:00 AM |
| Drivespace 3 volume reading under Windows XP Pro | User | Windows XP | 3 | 01-04-2007 03:50 AM |
| Reading News - Windows Mail | Poten Tate | Windows Vista | 5 | 01-02-2007 10:42 AM |
| New To Technology Questions? | Do You Need Help with Your Computer or Device? | Do You Need Help with this site? |