A .ISO is a digital copy of a cd or dvd. Almost 90% of all digital copys end on ".ISO". Why is this? Was there someone that called it .ISO and everyone just copied it?
4 Answers
The origin is the ISO 9660 file system which is used on CD-ROM. The extension .iso remained also for DVDs and Blu-Rays which use the UDF (ISO/IEC 13346) file system. See here for details.
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22+1 for mentioning that it does not necessarily contain an image with the ISO 9660 file system. – robingrindrod Apr 22 '13 at 12:38
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2Thanks its all clear now! It was me failing for not searching it up on Wikipedia. – Ben Apr 22 '13 at 10:04
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2The people that coined this term must admit that it does not contain much information. ".966" would have been much more meaningful. – Raúl Salinas-Monteagudo Apr 23 '13 at 21:37
The name is derivated from a norm issued by the International Organization for Standardization which specifies the file system on an optical medium [1]. That norm has the abbreviation ISO 9660 [2] and you can guess now why a CD-ROM image (and later on a DVD-ROM image) usually is named .iso.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_9660
[2] Some confusion can arise why ISO isn't an acronym of International Organization for Standardization. Quoting once again Wikipedia:
Recognizing that its initials would be different in different languages, the organization adopted ISO, based on the Greek word isos (ἴσος, meaning equal), as the universal short form of its name.
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4@Izkata because the short name of the organization is ISO http://www.iso.org/iso/about/about#2012_aboutiso_iso_name-text-Anchor – Evan Harper Apr 22 '13 at 14:02
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.iofsis ruled out at once due to DOS's8.3convention (also pointed out by @aldric), for the latterhave a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Organization_for_Standardization why ISO isn't abbreviated as IOS. – mpy Apr 22 '13 at 14:03
The .iso extension is an alternate or a shortened form of .iso9660 or .isoimg, which could stand for "ISO 9660-compliant disk image."
The original ISO 9660 standard appears to have been produced in 1988, when PCs were still using 8.3-character filenames (e.g. names could be only 8 characters long, and extensions only 3), so ISO was likely the first choice for shortening the extension to three characters.
Source: Wikipedia (.isoimg) and Wikipedia (.iso9660)
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8I've never seen a file with a
.isoimgextension, even on systems that support arbitrarily long extensions, the Wikipedia article you link to doesn't mention it, and a Google search doesn't show anything. Do you have a basis for.isobeing short for.isoimg, as opposed to, say, the phrase "ISO image"? – Keith Thompson Apr 23 '13 at 00:16 -
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isois also Greek for "same" (or so I've heard) – CamelBlues Apr 22 '13 at 16:06