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Need Advice On Burning Onto A Disc From A Mac

I need help i nedd god mode for the chronicles of riddick game plez help?

Hi

Press Ctrl + Alt + Tilde (~) to access the game's console then enter the code: cmd godmode

How do I format my Ubuntu hard disk so that I can install Windows?

You want to replace Ubuntu with Windows? Just start the Windows installer and when asked select “Use Entire disk”. The install does the format for you - it likely deletes all partitions and recreates new ones, then formats as NTFS.Do you want to add Windows as a 2nd boot option? You’ll need to reduce the partition(s) on which Ubuntu is installed - to make space for Windows. Do so through the partition tools provided in Live CD version of Ubuntu (you cannot modify the active partition, so boot from external), it’s usually some tool like GParted and should be included in any Ubuntu (or similar) ISO file - which you can burn to CD/DVD or write onto a bootable USB device.After you’ve reduced the partition(s) to make some space for Windows (you’d need around 30 to 50 GB minimum), install Windows and when asked about the drive, then only use available space instead of entire disk. Again, the install does the formatting - this time it ony creates new partition(s) in the free space, but still formats that as NTFS.After this, Windows has overwritten the boot menu. It will seem as if Ubuntu isn’t there anymore. You’ve got two options (I’d advise #1 as it’s the simplest and the least prone to errors):Restart from that external Live CD and get hold of the boot-repair tool to re-install the Grub boot loader (or whatever loader you preferred). Either install it after booting into the LiveCD (if possible) or rather get hold of a LiveCD with it already installed. E.g. Boot-Repair - Community Help WikiGo through some techy hoops to modify the Windows boot loader so it shows Ubuntu as a boot option. You might find it easier to use something like EasyBCD rather than trying to modify Windows’ bcdboot tool manually.

I have downloaded Fedora Design Suite Live. Can I burn it onto a DVD without verifying its checksum?

Yes you can. You are advised to verify the ISO and the burnt media so that you're sure that no errors occurred during the download and burning process. If something goes wrong during the installation, that way you know it wasn't due to bad installation media. It is completely optional, but strongly suggested. It is also suggested to use a USB flash drive nowadays rather than optical media - it's quicker and the creation process is less error prone.

I have a Dell laptop without a CD drive and I need to install a program from a CD, what are some other ways I can install the program?

There are many applications to turn a disc into an ISO which you can virtually mount.What I do, and do note that I am broke so I don’t have a good way of doing this, is I put it in my laptop, turn it into an ISO, upload it to my Gmail, send myself the Link in Skype on a group with just me, download my own file (I don’t have a USB stick I can really put in and those I do have are slower than the net) and launch the ISO.You mentioned your LAPTOP not having this though and I assume your family do not own another computer so I would go ask a friend to install the ISO making program and bring the disc around.

How do i scan a hand drawn drawing onto my computer?

you could take picture with a camera that works with your mac and the picture well put in your mac also you could go to a print shop ask if they could scan it and burn you disk of pictures maybe you do alot that way
you like 50 drawing cd can hold like 1.5 mb a pic into 70 mb on cd so like 35 picture so fill it up if you use printer to do it print some of your stuff get color lazer printed its better the the printer at home good luck have fun just some ideas bub101

In what format do recording studios give you the song files? On a CD? Flash drive?

Whatever you ask for.  Classic delivery format from mastering engineers is a "red book" audio CD - just a normal CD, which is suitable for reproduction at a manufacturing facility, and will play in any CD player.  Compact Disc Digital Audio  A lot of times clients want the master WAV files (16 bit, 44.1kHz) as well.  No problem, they are what was used to burn the CD.  If you ask, you can usually get MP3's or FLAC files.  Keep in mind that MP3's are not a legitimate format for master delivery because they are lossy.  We can put these data files on your flash drive, USB hard drive, or data CD.  If you want raw tracks (for remixing, archival purposes) of your recording session, we will just give you the session files, or for a fee (cost of time), export the files to 24 bit "zero-aligned" WAV files at the session sample rate.  By zero-aligned, I mean that each track starts at 0:00 no matter when the sound actually starts.  This will allow you to import the files into any DAW and have them sync up.Up to you whether you want the tracks "raw" or with the processing used in the mix.  If the processing / effects are included, it may be more useful to get "stems".  Stems are stereo submixes which, when played together, make up the stereo mix.  For example, stems of a rock/pop song might include stereo submixes of drums, bass, rhythm guitars, keyboards, percussion/other, lead vocals, background vocals, and lead guitars.So in short, ask and you shall receive.  If you don't ask, you'll at least end up with an audio CD from the mastering engineer.

I have formatted my laptop, and now I wish to install Linux into it. How do I do so?

First thing you need to do is, download the linux file which you want to install(that file should be in .iso format) and burn that file into a CD/DVD, whichever may seem convenient.If you have troubles burning the .iso file to a disk follow these instructions in the link below: How to Burn ISOs in Windows 7Now, insert that disc and follow the boot menu options by pressing the key when asked. It will ask you to partition your drive, so distribute the partition where you want linux/ubuntu to be installed.For example Ubuntu's installation should partition the drive for you automatically, and unless you have any special needs (like if you're on a Mac), you can breeze right through the installation with no problems. If not, you may be given a more advanced partitioning tool, and you'll have to create the partitions yourself. If this is the case, you'll actually want to create two new partitions. One is for the operating system itself, which I'd format as Ext4. Give it at least 10 GB of space, and set the mount point as /. You'll want to create the second partition for what's called swap space. This essentially helps your computer manage memory more effectively and keeps it running fast. If you have a small amount of ram (one or two GB), you'll want your swap partition to be twice as large as the amount of RAM you have. If you have 3 GB or more, you can probably just make a swap partition that's the same size as the amount of RAM you have.

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