Details for this torrent 

Teach yourelf Instant German
Type:
Audio > Audio books
Files:
1
Size:
849.13 MiB (890372096 Bytes)
Spoken language(s):
English
Uploaded:
2008-04-13 21:54:41 GMT
By:
Rossco92
Seeders:
0
Leechers:
1
Comments
11  

Info Hash:
DF29814A11F6224A1A2C34B3850B655ACAF84CAA




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Teach Yourself Instant German audio CD

Meant to accompany an exercise book, but I think is OK for standalone use

Enjoy =)

File list not available.

Comments

Sorry about the speed - Pishy UK BT Broadband - But shall keep seeding - Non-seeders will have their downloads ceased - I'm not here to waste bandwidth - Other than that, enjoy =)
It should be great if you can release the book also.
Is that possible????

Kannst du das buch auch uploaden bitte??
Sehr Vielen dank :)
Sorry, but it's not a digital copy - It's a paper-back copy =( Too small to scan well too
Was is los mit diesem ding? When I try to open the file I get "Can't find the file or file is not a CD image file. Magic ISO and Power ISO will not open. I used Nero to burn on to a DVD and only the desktop.ini file will show up. Rossco92, any advise on how to burn this thing where it works?
Hmm, try changing .iso to .cdr and then try to burn it.
Rossco92, burn with what? Nero doesn't recognize .cdr, Alcohol seems to recognize it but then will not initialize the DVD burner, keeps wanting a blank DVD even after I put in a blank DVD+R or DVD-R. It is a DVD we're talking about burning here, right? I thought I used to use a CD burning program out of Germany that burned filetype .cdr but don't remember it's name and that was back before DVDs. When I look up filetype all I find for .cdr is a Corel Graphics file type and I think some audio file type. What will burn a .cdr image?
FileExt says this about .cdr

Program - Final Cut Pro

Final Cut provides Mac users editing tools, sound design, real-time motion graphics and DVD authoring. CDR files are ISO images and, if moved to a PC, can be renamed and burned as ISO files.
They (ISO and CDR) are raw images, the extension doesn't really matter. No one else seems to have a problem =/ The original was a CD, not a DVD. The image file is just of a higher quality, as I used Disk Utility (Yes, on a Mac) and created a "DVD/CD Master Image". I don't know what else I can say to help you =(
Thanks for the research and attempt at help Rossco92. I think my basic problem has been pinpointed Mac vs. PC. I'll try to find out if Final Cut Pro or Disk Utility maybe have PC versions. That's wierd how a disk that's not supposed to hold no more than 650-700 megabytes gets blown up to 849 megabytes by this utility when creating an image. Looks like a lot of overhead there! I'm also trying to find something that might convert the file from iso to maybe bin/cue, no luck so far though, the conversion utilities I've tried will just not recognize the iso file as legitimate, again, probably because of Mac vs. PC issues.
Success! Found a program on the PC side, UltraISO, that was smart enough to recognize your file. I used that to extract the 8 aiff files. I was good to go at that point since I could have put the aiff files on my iPod to play, or Quicktime. Everything else on my iPod is mp3 though so I went ahead and used RiverPast to translate to .wav files then Xilisoft WMA MP3 Converter to produce MP3s. Just as a curious aside, and I'm not bashing Macs here, I like Macs and still have a 5 year old iMac., but the MP3s I finally ended up with were about 11 megs in size (44.1 kHz, 128 bit rate sampling). So all those files together were less than 100 megs in MP3. I compared listening to the AIFF, WAV and MP3 versions and "I" couldn't tell any difference. I have to plead ignorance here, I know AIFF has a feature that allows you to go back to where you left off on an iPod, but unless there is something else, boy is that a lot of overhead or what!??
Ah, well I'm glad you got it to work =D