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With DAEMON Tools for Mac you can back up your physical CD/DVD/HD DVD/Blu-ray discs into 'virtual discs' or so called 'disc image' files, which run directly on your hard drive. You can also work with images created by other burning programs! DAEMON Tools supports variety of image types. Use CD/DVD image converter to have one format images in your Image Catalog!

Emulate virtual CD/DVD-ROM/HD DVD and Blu-ray drives

DAEMON Tools for Mac enables you to emulate up to 4 CD/DVD virtual drives on your PC. Virtual drives will appear in your OS just like real ones. Select a virtual drive then choose a disc image you want to mount. Find the created virtual drive with mounted disc image in My Computer. Start working! Looks like working with a real drive and a real disc, doesn't it? Yes, but it is much faster!

Create a disc image

With DAEMON Tools for Mac you can create ISO and MDS image files from original discs inserted in physical CD/DVD/HD DVD/Blu-ray drives. Or use images you have created earlier with other program. DAEMON Tools products work with variety of image types.

DAEMON Tools is a disk image mounter, Mac-oriented program and must-have tool on your computer. It allows you to mount different types of virtual images and use them all on your Mac. To find out more and to download DAEMON Tools for Mac, visit this page. Seamlessly combines all the best image optimization tools: MozJPEG, pngquant, Pngcrush, 7zip, SVGO and Google Zopfli. All Free and Open-Source. “The app works efficiently, it’s brain-dead simple to use, and it does just what it promises” — MacWorld. Designing iMage Tools came with one simple goal: Offer the image editing tools to all starters, to help them editing images without professional skills and enormous investment. So, the application is made with remarkable intuitive interface, and all in one editing functions to process one.

Key features

  • Creates .iso, *.mds/*.mdf and *.mdx images images;
  • Create up to 4 DT, SCSI or HDD devices;
  • Performs image mounting and unmounting;
  • Supports *.mdx, *.mds/*.mdf, *.iso, *.b5t, *.b6t, *.bwt, *.ccd, *.cdi, *.bin/*.cue, *.ape/*.cue, *.flac/*.cue, *.nrg, *.isz.
  • Offers powerful command line interface.

Most Mac OS X users are familiar with disk image files ending with the '.dmg' suffix. Files ending with '.img' are called disk copy files, and are another type of disk image. The icon is a picture of a hard drive on a piece of paper with the corner folded up. IMG files were more common with the OS 9 operating system than with OS X, but can still be mounted on modern Mac computers. If double-clicking on the file does not mount the image, opening the image from the Disk Utility application may work. Failing that, the Terminal application may work.

Img

Double-Clicking to Mount

Step 1

Double-click on the .IMG in the Finder. This will open the image and reveal the file or folder that was used to create the image.

Step 2

Look for the mounted file or folder on your desktop. It will also be displayed in the Finder, located on the left column.

Eject the disk image by clicking on the 'Eject' button next to it in the Finder. You can also eject it by dragging it to the 'Trash' in the Dashboard. The 'Trash' icon will change to an eject button as you drag the file. The mounted file or folder will also be ejected the next time you shut down or restart the computer.

Using Disk Utility

Step 1

Open the Finder and click the 'Applications' folder. Then click the 'Utilities' folder. Double-click the Disk Utility program.

Step 2

Click the 'File' menu. Select 'Open Disk Image.' Select the IMG file in the navigation window and click 'OK.'

Locate your mounted file or folder on the Desktop, or in the left column of the Finder window.

Using the Terminal

Step 1

Open the Finder and move the IMG file to your hard disk on the left of the window. This will place it in the root path so you will not have to type the path when using Terminal.

Step 2

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In the Finder, click the 'Applications' folder. Then click the 'Utilities' folder. Double-click the Terminal program to launch it.

Step 3

Type 'hdiutil mount sample.img' (without quotation marks) in the text field, replacing 'sample.img' with the name of your file.

Open the Finder. The file should be mounted and visible on the Desktop, and on the left column of the Finder window.

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