
I found a YouTube video that explains how to create a. cdr? Sometimes that works for me, and sometimes not. I’m assuming you didn’t try to just change the.

cpgz file ending, and if you double click it you get nowhere, I think it’s a vicious circle trying to deal with those. Thanks to Gavin McLelland’s post: and James N, Sears for compiling bchunk so I didn’t have to: iso onto your Desktop now, or burn it in Disk Utility/iTunes or Toast depending upon what kind of files are enclosed. iso file in the Terminal window and you’re done. In place of input.bin and input.cue type the names of the. cue files to your home folder (where bchunk now also resides), and in Terminal type: Go to your Applications/Utilities folder, open Terminal and type (you can copy and paste):Īfter I did this, Terminal asked me for my administrator password, go ahead and type it in and hit Return/Enter.ĥ. zip file by double clicking it and copy it to your home folder:Ĥ. If your Mac hasn’t unzipped the file automatically, extract the.

Download bchunk from (just right click and download/save file): ģ. Xcode Developer Tools should be installed.Ģ. (I followed the steps below running 10.5.8 on an Intel, but this should work on 10.4 and on the PPC as well.)ġ. If you’re running Leopard and not Snow Leopard, be sure you download the correct version as the most recent Xcode is only compatible with Snow Leopard. You can find them on your Leopard (or Tiger) Installation disc or you can download it free, directly from Apple’s Developer site: but you will need your Apple ID. bin/.cue file you want to open, this should help:įirst off, in order for this to work, you need to have your Xcode Developer Tools installed. If you’re new to the Mac or never used the terminal and you’re scratching your head because you’ve a. Also by the time I’m confronted with a pair of .bin/.cue files again, I’ll have probably forgotten the commands.

bin/.cue files rarely, so I thought it would be a good idea to write down the following steps in plain English for the non-techies out there. CD/DVD’s that won’t eject, Trash that never wants to leave, etc.) I deal with. I don’t consider myself to be particularly “tech-ie”, I use the terminal for very basic tasks when my Mac refuses to cooperate any other way (eg. After reading through articles, forum and comment threads I realized I could’ve ditched the Toast method years ago, using bchunk and Terminal, egads! In the past I’ve always had to go through a number of steps to convert and burn using Toast, which is fine, but kind of a pain that I choose not to engage in any longer. bin/.cue files that Apple’s Disk Utility won’t open, burn or convert. Today I found myself with another pair of those darn.
