I did not check the hash values. How do you do that? Sent from my iPad > On Feb 6, 2014, at 12:09 AM, Darr247 <darr247@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 06 February 2014 @ 03:42 zulu, Hal Wigoda wrote: >> I downloaded the CentOS-6.5-x86_64-bin-DVD1.iso >> and CentOS-6.5-x86_64-bin-DVD12.iso >> and tried to burn them to a DVD but both Windows 7 and IOS >> ( MacBook Pro ) do not recognize these as valid isos. >> >> What am I doing wrong? > > What are their hashes? > Here are some hash values of the files I'm sharing in a bittorrent client: > > CentOS-6.5-x86_64-bin-DVD1.iso (4,467,982,336 bytes) > MD5 - 83221db52687c7b857e65bfe60787838 > SHA1 - 32c7695b97f7dcd1f59a77a71f64f2957dddf738 > SHA256 - c796ab378319393f47b29acd8ceaf21e1f48439570657945226db61702a4a2a1 > > CentOS-6.5-x86_64-bin-DVD2.iso (1,284,395,008 bytes) > MD5 - 91018b86ca338360bc1212f06ea1719f > SHA1 - 25e5de362ba6c75d793dbeb060b27ba1865cb5df > SHA256 - afd2fc37e1597c64b3c3464083c0022f436757085d9916350fb8310467123f77 > > There are currently over 1000 other people sharing the > CentOS-6.5-x86_64-bin-DVD1to2.torrent, too. > So, do the hashes of your files match those? > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos