Technical support:
When I try to convert *.vcd files to .iso format,
I get an error "access violation at adress 00000000"?
That means you used a crack to patch WinISO. DON'T DO
IT! The crack will destroy WinISO.exe and make it unstable,
and IT'S ILLEGAL! Also it's IMPORTANT to know that your
ISO files will be damaged when you use the cracked WinISO
to edit/extract/convert your ISO files.
WinISO costs only USD $30 for registration! Buy
it now >>>
What's different between the Trial version and the Registered
version?
The limit of the unregistered version are as follows:
1. Can not extract a file greater than 3MB.
2. Can not convert an image greater than 100MB.
3. Can not save an image greater than 100MB.
4. Can not save an image greater than 100MB as new file.
WinISO costs only USD $30 for registration! Buy
it now >>>
How to update my WinISO?
1. Uninstall all old version of WinISO;
2. Please visit http://www.winiso.com/download.htm
download the latest version;
3. Install the latest version;
4. Run WinISO, OK!
If you create an iso of a CD with winiso, what program can
you use to burn it back to CD?
Almost all burning software support ISO images and can burn
it back to CD. e.g: Nero, Easy CD Creator, etc.
Is WinISO able to edit and save NRG files, and is it
compatible with Nero 5.5 and Nero ImageDrive?
Yes, WinISO supports editing NRG files, but note that the
NRG image should not include audio information.
Does WinISO support audio images?
No, WinISO does not support audio images at this time.
Does WinISO support bootable CD?
Yes, WinISO supports bootable CDs perfectly. WinISO can
not only could edit a CD image file without destroy its
bootable information but can also add bootable information
to a CD image file to make it bootable!
In Create ISO from CDROM, what is ASPI or FILE means?
In ASPI mode, you will get an ISO file with exactly the
same structure as the original CD-ROM disc, with bootable
information, and all other internal disc format. If you
burn this CD image file to a disc, you get a exactly same
disc as the original.
In FILE mode, WinISO will create a new ISO file by copy
all files and directories on the disc. This ISO file will
use WinISOs default format. If disc is bootable, then the
bootable information will be lost.
After I modified my bootable ISO it isn't bootable again!
I think you used the "Save as" option to save
your modified ISO. Reason being is because the "Save
as" function will rebuild your ISO image. Maybe the
order of the files aren't the same as the original one so
it can not boot again. Please copy a new ISO image from
your original disc then edit it and use the "Save"
function directly and it should work fine.