Virtual drive
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A virtual drive is a term used with respect to computers when a drive is emulated in some fashion. The drive being emulated could be a hard drive, floppy drive, CD/DVD or a network share among others.
A virtual hard drive can be created from RAM for fast read/write access. See: RAM disk. As well, there is software that makes one's Gmail account act as a virtual external drive.
Virtual DVD or CD drives are often mounted disk images via disk image emulator software. This allows one to read a CD or DVD from the disk image that is usually located on the hard drive, rather than from the disc drive. This allows users to run software requiring the CD or DVD without having to swap discs, or even possess it.
[edit] Virtual Burner
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A Virtual CD Burner is a device driver that emulates a CD/DVD Burner. It appears as another drive in the system with writing capabilities. When information is written to the drive, it creates an ISO Image representation of the CD that would, under normal circumstances, be physically created.
This allows you to use any CD burning software to create what can be later mounted as a virtual drive.
[edit] Known programs that support Virtual Burning
Virtual CD by H+H Software GmbH, as of version 8.0
[edit] External links
- Daemon Tools - free emulator
- CD Emulator - free virtual CD-ROM program for Windows® XP (and unofficially Windows® 2000) from Microsoft.
- OnlineDrive - file management, viewer and sharing application with data center levels of file protection.
- RoamDrive - free Windows® application to use a web-based e-mail services to store files.
- Virtual CD - H+H Software GmbH website
- WebDrive - virtual drive connection to SFTP, FTP, and WebDAV servers.
- Floppy Drive Emulator - free virtual Floppy Drive program for Windows® NT/2000/XP/2003. It only works on 32 bit systems.