Find the answer to your Linux question:
Results 1 to 6 of 6
Hey guys, Can anyone tell me how i burn an iso image at a lower speed on VBURN. The speed that it always burns at is x36 which is way ...
  1. #1
    Just Joined!
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    2

    HELP Burning Speed

    Hey guys,
    Can anyone tell me how i burn an iso image at a lower speed on VBURN. The speed that it always burns at is x36 which is way to high because there are errors on every disc?

  2. #2
    oz
    oz is offline
    forum.guy
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    arch linux
    Posts
    18,095
    Welcome to the forums!

    Sorry, I'm not familiar with vburn at all, but have you tried running man vburn to see if there is a manual page for it?
    oz

    new members/users: read this first | new member faq
    no private messages requesting computer support - post them on the forums!
    please use the "report post" button to alert our forum admins to problematic posts rather than responding to them yourself.

  3. #3
    Just Joined!
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    2
    Tried that but no manual.
    Do you know for any simple iso burner where i can choose the burning speed?

  4. #4
    oz
    oz is offline
    forum.guy
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    arch linux
    Posts
    18,095
    You can find some Linux burners here:

    CD/DVD Writers | Linux App Finder

    If you want Windows burners, take a look here:

    How to successfully burn or write an ISO-image to cd or dvd
    oz

    new members/users: read this first | new member faq
    no private messages requesting computer support - post them on the forums!
    please use the "report post" button to alert our forum admins to problematic posts rather than responding to them yourself.

  5. #5
    Linux Guru Rubberman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    I can be found either 40 miles west of Chicago, or in a galaxy far, far away.
    Posts
    8,970
    If you are running the KDE desktop, you can get k3b which is a great burning tool, and it does give you control over your burning speed. Under the covers it uses cdrecord which is a command-line tool to burn cd's and dvd's. If you use that, the speed=# option (# is the speed to burn, such as 16, 24, etc) will allow you to specify the burn speed. See the cdrecord man page. It describes all the options in detail.
    Sometimes, real fast is almost as good as real time.
    Just remember, Semper Gumbi - always be flexible!

  6. #6
    Linux Engineer b2bwild's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Behind You!
    Posts
    1,108
    If you are using gnome the nautilus-cd-burner is a easiest way around.
    Never make any misteaks.

    Read my Blog at --> Penguin Inside Subscribe Feed

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
...