An extension to the ISO 9660 format that Microsoft developed to allow long file names. Joliet uses the Unicode international character set and allows filenames up to 64 characters long (including spaces).
CD-ROM recording format that is commonly used on Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows NT. A Joliet CD can be read on most kinds of computer, and unlike ISO-9660 it allows long filenames. Joliet is based on extensions of ISO-9660.
This is a CD format created by Microsoft and is currently supported by Win95 and WinNT. It's useful when doing backups from Windows 95 onto a CD-R, because the disc is still readable as ISO-9660 but shows the long filenames under Win95.(empty)(empty)
File system format based on à ISO 9660. The Joliet format offers special extensions such as Unicode.
A standard format for burning CD-Rs and CD-RWs, created as an extension to ISO 9660 by Microsoft as part of Windows 95. In the Joliet format, long filenames are preserved.
Joliet is an extension of the ISO 9660 standard, developed by Microsoft to allow CDs to be recorded using long filenames, and using the Unicode international character set. Joliet allows you to use filenames up to 64 characters in length, including spaces. For more information.
Microsoft's extension to the ISO 9660 file system to handle long filenames which are part of the features of Windows 95.
Microsoft's superset of the ISO 9660 CD-ROM file system that retains the long filenames and other information used in the company's Windows 95 and later operating systems.
An ISO 9660 extension that allows Windows files to exceed the “8-dot-3” naming restriction. With this improvement, the file names can be up to 64 characters long and include spaces.
n. An extension to the ISO 9660 (1988) standard developed to include long filenames or filenames outside the 8.3 convention. This format is used in some new CD-ROMs for operating systems, such as Windows 95, that can handle such filenames. See also 8.3, ISO 9660, long filenames.
Joliet is the name of an extension to the ISO 9660 file system. It has been specified and endorsed by Microsoft and has been supported by all versions of its Windows OS since Windows 95 and Windows NT. Its primary focus is the relaxation of the filename restrictions inherent with full ISO 9660 compliance.