aj47 Posted October 7, 2006 Posted October 7, 2006 I'm a bit annoyed at the moment as I just spent a week downloading a torrent to find it's in a wierd format that I don't know how to work. When I open up the file there's one BIN file that doesnt do much when I click on it, and a 'burn at once icon' which when I open and click 'write' it just says 'current project does not match inserted media'. Anyway i'm bored of clicking random things in the hope it will do something. Does anyone know how to play it?
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted October 7, 2006 Posted October 7, 2006 What did it originally claim to be? A movie?
5614 Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 .bin is a disk or CD image, kind of like cue or iso files. Try getting something like Demon Tools: http://www.techspot.com/download208.html Install that Run it (it opens a prog which runs in the system tray) Right click on the system tray Go to the Virtual CD/DVD Select a drive and click Mount Image Then just browse and select the .bin file Then go to my computer and it will appear (or it might auto start) like a normal CD. Except there's on physical CD, hence it's known as a virtual CD drive.
aj47 Posted October 8, 2006 Author Posted October 8, 2006 hmm I did that but when I click on the new drive in my computer, it just opens up four wierdly named folders each with VCD files which won't open. What did it originally claim to be? A movie? It's series one of 'the young ones' which I highly recommend to anyone.
x__heavenly__x Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 Well, you got the demon tools part working. And also opening the bin file. Try running the VCD files on VLC media player because most of the torrent downloaded files need more codecs to run properly. VLC Media Player (small and effective!) : http://www.videolan.org/vlc/download-windows.html
aj47 Posted October 8, 2006 Author Posted October 8, 2006 No worries, I found I could play the vcd's on windows media so it's all good. Cheers anyway.
5614 Posted October 9, 2006 Posted October 9, 2006 Cool. It is common thing when downloading big files that they don't have the expected file extension. Often they are zipped with the .rar extension. You need to unzip this with winRAR. This sometimes get people because they expect anything zipped to be .zip, this is not the case. The other most common suprise is to get, as aj47 got, a CD image. Extensions like: .iso .cue .bin .mds are all CD image files. You open them all using a Virtual CD program, such as Demon Tools (see post #3).
aj47 Posted October 9, 2006 Author Posted October 9, 2006 Cheers 5614 great help. Seems like every torrent is made to confuse me.
5614 Posted October 9, 2006 Posted October 9, 2006 BitTorrent isn't, at first sight, as easy to use as some other software. If you have any other questions just ask!
RyanJ Posted October 10, 2006 Posted October 10, 2006 Just a notr for some strange reason some programs that use automatic updates (such as anti-virus applications) use the .bin extension to store definition list's and the like, probably because [ui]bin[/i] represents binary[/b], the format in which the information is stored. -- Ryan Jones
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now