My Favorite Free ISO Burning Software
This is my favorite burning software and I keep forgetting what it is called! So, here it is so you can remind me when I forget!
The Official ImgBurn Website
ImgBurn is a lightweight CD / DVD / HD DVD / Blu-ray burning application that everyone should have in their toolkit!
It has several ‘Modes’, each one for performing a different task:
- Read - Read a disc to an image file
- Build - Create an image file from files on your computer or network - or you can write the files directly to a disc
- Write - Write an image file to a disc
- Verify - Check a disc is 100% readable. Optionally, you can also have ImgBurn compare it against a given image file to ensure the actual data is correct
- Discovery - Put your drive / media to the test! Used in combination with DVDInfoPro, you can check the quality of the burns your drive is producing
You can download your own copy of ImgBurn from the following locations:
- Mirror 1 - Provided by BetaNews
- Mirror 2 - Provided by Digital Digest
- Mirror 3 - Provided by SpeedLabs
- Mirror 4 - Provided by DVD Recordable
- Mirror 5 - Provided by Free-Codecs.com
- Mirror 6 - Provided by Softpedia
- Mirror 7 - Provided by ImgBurn
CRC32: 7D8AC0D2
MD5: 57ADA61B81DA3566E419373E6F351CEF
SHA-1: A7D32B28A56E60FFFB7AE3B11DDE42EBA5852654
3 Responses to “My Favorite Free ISO Burning Software”
-
Andrew Says:
February 20th, 2009 at 10:27 amhave you ever used ISO Recorder? Great product, right click an iso and burn it to a disk. Also lets you right click a cd drive and make an iso.
-
Muncher Says:
February 20th, 2009 at 10:34 amThis is a nice tool. Simple to use and not cluttered with dozens of options you will never need. I’ve used this for a while and like it.
-
Chanio Says:
March 2nd, 2009 at 11:45 amThis application exceeds what it states!
I pointed to the directory that then branched in a couple of subfolders that I wanted to burn into a DVD disk.
The application detected that the structure and contents belonged to a DVD and offered me to do some checks to adjust the burning to what is required in a standard DVD burning. So, after some questions (I am not an expert in DVD burning…) the application successfully burned the DVD.
Please, notice that it wasn’t my intention to specify anything that might be required to burn a DVD… So, in most cases, it would be better to use a specific application like DVD Shrink…
But what matters here is the intelligence behind such a simple application.alberto

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=2dc7e6f6-a691-4a4e-94fd-15519168d549)
