But I only recently discovered that it does not support DVDs that contain multiple angles. In regard to VLC, I have used it for many years and it can usually play anything I throw at it. And, I believe, though I'm not sure, if necessary, you can create new CUE files from existing BIN files with the Tools option to Create CUE file, but you may lose certain properties. And, for burning in ImgBurn, CUE files are generally necessary for certain Audio CD properties, like, I believe, CD Text. CloneDrive mounts BIN files so CUE files are not necessary for mounting. You can delete the CUE files, but they may be necessary for proper writing later. It creates virtual drives in the system where you can mount ISO, BIN, etc. I use an external application called Virtual CloneDrive. They're links to the actual tracks natively on the CD.Īs far as I know, there is no native way to mount a BIN file in Windows. It doesn't have a "file system" per se, but in order for Windows software to play the actual audio tracks on the CD, it needs the CDA's which are generated by the interface. To paraphrase Seth Brundle from The Fly, the computer is giving us its interpretation of an Audio CD. So, that would be my guess as to why ISO isn't supported. CUE files are necessary for properly accessing Audio CD tracks, and CUE is used in association with BIN as brothered pairs. When inserted into the PC, the PC can detect the data track as data, but won't recognize the audio tracks portion in File Explorer.Īs for why ISO is not used for Audio CD, it just isn't. It has one Track for audio tracks and a Track for the data. Any Audio CD that has data on in when you insert it into a PC is actually a Mixed Mode disc. It can play them, but it can't read "data" off of them with proprietary software like Windows Media Player or any other CD ripper. So, while they're read on stand alone CD players because they were created for them, Windows had to adapt to read Audio CD's. So, PC's had to retro fit support for them. It's a proprietary format created long before PC's became popular. Technically, an Audio CD has no "data" as typically defined by Windows. The 0 bytes being detected for an Audio CD by File Explorer is normal.
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