I have learned that the CD that I had burnt at the public library is an ".iso" image and is unusable, whereas I could have programmed NERO to reinterpret the image when it was created. Is the ISObuster utility proper to make this usable or must I download again?
Welcome.
Perhaps your problem will be obvious to someone here who has used NERO, and if so I will yield to their advice.
So you've downloaded a Debian installation image as an .iso file.
Your scenario would seem to be one of the following two, although I'm not quite sure which, and I don't quite understand why you would need to use this ISObuster utility (which I've never heard of, actually, but just looked it up).
a) You now have a CD with a regular, Windows-readable filesystem, that contains a file named [name].iso.
b) You now have a CD which does not have a Windows-readable filesystem, but rather an image written from a .iso.
If (a), then you already have the .iso file. You don't need to re-download anything, you just need to write it to a CD as an image rather than as a file in a filesystem. (Perhaps you meant "write again"?)
If (b), then, assuming you have downloaded a Debian installation image, and the image file is not corrupted, you should be all set to install Debian. If your computer supports booting from CD (BIOS setting), configure your BIOS to boot from the CD drive, insert the CD, and you can begin the installation.
Did I understand your meaning? Feel free to ask here for any installation questions, and someone will be glad to answer your question or direct you to the proper resource.
dircha
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]