

You will have all four categories (video ,audio, image, ROM device) settled on the left side into expandable columns that can show or hide their correspondent formats. All the major functions are arranged on top of the main window in a toolbar followed underneath by the main zone which shows any processes started. Additionally you can also add subtitles, crop video files, merge or split audio and video files or rip DVD or audio discs into video and audio files but also into popular ISO/CSO images.įormat Factory not only is a complete media converter, but it also shows its features in a reasonable interface form, that can easily compete with similar paid products. With Format Factory you can convert any media file into most popular formats such as: wmv, avi, mkv, flv, mp3, wma, jpg, gif, etc. There are no guarantees that these discs will work but I think it’s worth a shot to try them before doing a full factory state recovery and losing everything on the HDD.I think it's time to say goodbye to all paid video converters, because Free Time team breaks the barrier and introduces on the market a complete free converter featuring all the necessary formats for video, audio and image files, including also formats for all the major portable devices: PS3, PSP, XBOX 360, iPhone/iPad/iPod, etc. It seems to work from there but I didn’t run it completely since my Vista installation is fine.

You can NOT install with the disc so you have to click on repair. I tried it out on the Vista machine here and it boots up into the normal installation screen with the options to install or repair. UPDATE: I have uploaded the ISO for 32 bit Vista. I will keep this topic updated if I’m successful in the uploading. If you really don’t want to use P2P, I will be trying to upload the actual disc ISO files to my online storage site.

I know, the dreaded P2P, but these are perfectly safe and a legal and legitimate use of the technology.

The files they offer are torrents that have to be used in a bit torrent client such as uTorrent. They are NOT installation discs, they just give you the Recovery Console in a bootable format from which you may be able to repair your system. If however, you are one of the many people who bought a new PC with the OS pre-installed and did not get an OS disc, these discs may prove invaluable in repairing your system without having to revert to the state the machine was in when it left the factory. If you have the installation disc for you OS, you don’t need these. I have found a website that is hosting downloads of recovery discs for Vista and W7.
