HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner

Anyone tried this FREE soft ....... h**p://www.ht-fireman.com/

HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner is simple and easy-to-use burning software.
HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner allows you to create Multi-session Data CD/DVD, Audio CD, MP3 Disk and ISO image easily.

Description

HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner shows you easiest way to burn Data disk, Audio CD, MP3 Disk and ISO image.
To burn disk, you only need to drag-and-drop files/folders into HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner from Explorer, and click “Burn!” button. You can get burned disk with only a few clicks and drags.
HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner allows you to create/continue/complete the multi-session data disks.
HT Fireman CD/DVD Burner supports ‘on the fly’ recording, so you don’t need to worry about the hard-drive free space. And also, it burns at surprisingly fast burning speed.

Features

Supports drag-and-drop from Explorer
Supports on-the-fly recording
Supports load sessions from multi-session disk.
Supports Disk/Writer information view.

[DataBurn]
1. Can rename file/folder name
2. Can make new folders
3. Can create multi-session disk
4. Provides close-disk option

[AudioBurn]
1. Can customize audio track order

[MP3 Disk]
1. Can create MP3 CD disk
2. Can make new folders
3. Can create multi-session disk
4. Provide close-disk option

[ISO Maker]
1. Can create CD ISO image

[ISO Burn]
1. Can burn CD ISO image

Specification

Input :
[DataBurn] : Files/folders in your hard drive
[AudioBurn] : MPEG-1 Stereo Audios and Waves
[MP3 Disk] : MPEG-1 Layer 3 Audios or MPEG-2 Layer 3 Audios(MP3 files)
[ISO Maker] : Files/folders in your hard drive
[ISO Burn] : ISO 9660 image in your hard drive

Operating Systems : Windows 98SE/Me/2000/XP

Writer Types Supported : CD-R/RW, DVD-R/-RW/+R/+RW/RAM, DVD+R DL
 
Interesting... - there it's called freeware, while at the main honestech page, it seems to be down as a trial

http://www.honestech.com/main/menu1_5c.asp

http://www.honestech.com/main/menu5_1.asp ... free 30 day and label maker is not included

http://www.ht-fireman.com/menu2.asp - on the dowload page, it definitely says
This program is a freeware that you can use with unlimited usage and functionality.
Please Check the system requirement.
- and that site looks legitimate ... maybe it's something that wasn't doing that well in the market - I mean, if you were going to buy bog-standard writer software, you'd buy Nero or one of the other major names, you sure as hell wouldn't drop $40 (all but a cent) on one from a company better known for MPEG encoding and other things in that sort of area, so they made it a freebie to get their name out there.

Looks like it might line up as a good, basic writer software, for anyone that doesn't already have one.
 
the actual download link says it all from download.com


and this is from the original link above the ht-fireman page :)

Downloads: 265,014 Requirements: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
Publisher: Honest Technology Limitations: 30-day trial,
Date added: September 1, 2005 File size: 7.48MB
License: Free to try; $39.99 to buy
$40 :eek:

i will pass on this :)
 
http://forum.ccleaner.com/lofiversion/index.php/t2397.html

Not ringing praise - a few older reports DO have it as delivering the odd "passenger" as well, though current reports seem to have it as clean.

AHA!

The Trial offered at honestech's main site is 2.0

Though a 2.0 box illustration is used, the one that says freeware from ht-fireman is version 1.4

So, the answer is maybe, but it seems that it may not be perfect
 
http://www.honestech-us.com/products/english/free/htfiremancddvdburner14eng.exe

That's the one the "Download 2" for XP SP2 users links to, from this page
http://www.ht-fireman.com/menu2.asp

With the statement
This program is a freeware that you can use with unlimited usage and functionality.
Please Check the system requirement.
I'll see if any of my archivers can unpack the SFX without running it, and read any licence enclosed.

Sad that you have to look a gift horse in the mouth, but these days, you can't afford not to.

... 7-Zip could see into it, but nothing worth noting, other than the dotnetinstaller that would seem to suggest this requires .net.
 
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