:-)īlu-Ray is expensive compared to DVD, but today at <$100 drives are cheaper than the 1st DVD burner I bought, & a lot cheaper than the $300+ I paid for my 1st CD burner years ago. it'll probably be quite a while before I can buy 25 GB of Flash RAM storage for <$1. You could also try mounting the ISOs to a virtual BD drive - there's quite a few free apps just for that, so maybe check out the tools section at. You might try contacting the dev's to see if playing ISOs is supported, & if so, maybe they can help get things working right. IMHO you may be having similar problems with today's GOTD not working properly, or it may just not work with ISO files. I had problems getting Mac Blu-Ray Player working with discs/ISOs, but it did try to open both. Not every PC/laptop comes with or has Blu-Ray player software, no player suits everyone, plus you may not be able to use copies of that software on your other PCs/laptops to play shared Blu-Ray files, or Blu-Ray you've burned to DVD. what’s wrong with the blueray player software that came on my Dell? It plays BR’s with no problems at all so I fail to see why anyone would produce a player for bluerays." Those that do usually bundle an older, limited OEM version. #40: "If I bought a blue ray drive for my computer wouldn’t it come with the software to play bluray?" Blu-Ray's just the next step from DVD, like DVD it can hold video, & like DVD we'll probably all eventually have BD writing drives. BlueRay came too late and is too expensive. #37: ".But if I wanted to play BlueRay (which I dont) I would have a dedicated lump of hardware, not use my PC. I was hoping it would play blu ray ripped to.
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