How Do I Use, Open, Extract Bin, Cue, or ISO Files?

November 6, 2008 · Filed Under Software · 1 Comment 
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How do I unpack these compressed files?

.bin
.cue
.iso

These are files commonly associated with an image of CD and DVD. There are two ways to open these files, they are:

Method 01

Burn them to a disk, programs such as Nero or NTI does a pretty good job, these programs will extract the compress file while burning it to the CD or DVD. This method requires a blank CD or DVD.

Method 02

It doesn’t make any sense to burn the file to a CD when u only needs to access the information once in a while. You can access these files with a virtual CD or DVD emulator without ever burning them. Some of the free tools available are Daemon Tools and Microsoft Virtual CD control panel.

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How to Rip or Compress DVD to Fit Into a 700MB CD and iPod Touch

December 8, 2007 · Filed Under How To and Online Tutorials · Comment 
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How to Rip a Movie for your iPod with HandBrake? Handbrake has a list of tutorials on how to rip a movie to your iPod or fit to a DVD movie to a 700MB CD. HandBrake is an open-source, GPL-licensed, multiplatform, multithreaded DVD to MPEG-4 converter, it has a relatively user friendly interface, and is available for MacOS X, Linux and Windows.

How to Rip or Compress DVD to Fit Into a 700MB CD and iPod

How to Rip or Compress DVD to Fit Into a 700MB CD and iPod

What makes Handbrake different from other DVD ripper is the various output format, unlike other video encoder or compressor, Handbrake can compress a DVD movie for your iPod, not only does it keeps the quality of the output video to the highest, file size are small as well, here is the list of features:

Supported sources:

  • Any DVD-like source: VIDEO_TS folder, DVD image or real DVD (encrypted or unencrypted, but protection methods other than CSS are not supported and must be handled externally with third-party software), and some .VOB and .TS files
  • PAL or NTSC
  • AC-3, DTS, LPCM or MPEG audio tracks

Outputs:

  • File format: MP4, MKV, AVI or OGM
  • Video: MPEG-4 or H.264 (1 or 2 passes or constant quantizer/rate encoding)
  • Audio: AAC, MP3, Vorbis or AC-3 pass-through (supports encoding of several audio tracks)
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