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Have a problem opening a .IMA file? We collect information about file formats and can explain what IMA files are. Additionally we recommend software suitable for opening or converting such files.
Nov 26, 2018 If your IMA file is related to a piece of hardware on your computer, you might need to update your device drivers associated with that hardware in order to open it. This problem is commonly related to multimedia file types that depend upon a piece of hardware inside of your computer to be successfully opened, such as a sound card or graphics card. The HEIF Image Extension enables Windows 10 devices to read and write files that use the High Efficiency Image File (HEIF) format. Such files can have a.heic or.heif file extension. Images that are stored in HEIF files that have the.heic file extension are compressed using the HEVC format.
What is the .IMA file type?
A shorthand for 'Image,' the .ima filename extension is conventionally used to denote the generic Bootable Disk Image (.ima) file type and the underlying raw, sector-by-sector disk image format. Although the .ima extension was initially only used for true FAT12 floppy-disk images created in MS-DOS, it is now assigned to various bootable images. Unlike .ima, a more generic .img extension is widely used to represent any disk image. An .ima file is a bootable disk image that for compatibility reasons must use the 3.5' floppy-disk image format (1,440 KB). It is a sector-by-sector dump of the raw disk data. The .ima extension is automatically assigned to images created off bootable media, incl. hard disks, memory cards, USB flash drives, etc. Once created, such a bootable image (.ima) can be used to copy the original disk on a different physical media, or mounted on a virtual drive. A number of disk image tools can create, open, mount, or record IMA images, as well as convert them other image formats like ISO.
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Additionally, the .ima extension denotes the IncrediMail Animation (.ima) file type associated with IncrediMail, a commercial e-mail client for Microsoft Windows by Perion Network Ltd. Here, an .ima file represents an animated image that can be used in e-mail messages sent with IncrediMail. Internally, the .ima file is a Microsoft Cabinet archive containing the 'content.ini' control file along with animated graphics (.gif) and sound (.mp3) files. On systems with IncrediMail installed, the .ima file type is associated with the IncrediMail Content Importer (ImpCnt.exe).
The .ima extension is also commonly used to denote DICOM Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) image files (.ima) obtained with Siemens MRI medical scanners (e.g., Siemens MAGNETOM). An .ima file is a container for a series of sequential MRI scans (usually, of a human brain) that can be opened, viewed, and analyzed using dedicated MRI software or open-source packages like ImageJ. Besides, Siemens DICOM (.ima) images can be directly viewed using several multi-format image viewers.
Software to open or convert IMA files
You can open IMA files with the following programs:IrfanView by Irfan Skiljan
PowerISO by Power Software Ltd
IncrediMail by IncrediMail Ltd.
A utility to mount hard disk and optical disc images in DOSBox.
Note: You can use Disk Explorer to copy files and folders to/from images (but not to delete them or DOSBox will consider the images corrupted! Read the aforementioned link for more info).
- 2Optical disc images
- 2.1Loading an ISO image
- 2.2Loading a CUE image
- 3Hard disk images
- 3.2Loading a regular hard disk image
- 3.3Bootable hard disk images
Command line parameters
IMGMOUNT DRIVE [imagefile] -t [image_type] -fs [image_format]
-size [sectorsbytesize, sectorsperhead, heads, cylinders -u DRIVE]
- DRIVE
- Drive name (letter) the image will use
- a for the drive letter a: or
- b for the drive letter b: etc..
- imagefile
- Location of the image files to mount in DOSBox. The location can be on a mounted drive inside DOSBox, or on your real disk. It is possible to mount multiple (e.g.
'~/images/CD1.cue ~/images/CD2.cue [..] ~images/CDn.cue'
) optical disc images (ISOs or CUE/BIN) as well, if you need CD swapping capabilities specify all images in succession. The CDs can be swapped with CTRL-F4 at any time.
- -t
- The following are valid image types:
- floppy
- Specifies a floppy image or images. DOSBox will automatically identify the disk geometry (360K, 1.2MB, 720K, 1.44MB, etc).
- iso
- Specifies an optical disc iso image. The geometry is automatic and set for this size. This can be an iso or a cue/bin.
- hdd
- Specifies a hard disk image. The proper CHS geometry must be set for this to work.
- -fs
- The following are valid file system formats:
- iso
- Specifies the ISO 9660 optical disc format.
- fat
- Specifies that the image uses the FAT file system. DOSBox will attempt to mount this image as a drive in DOSBox and make the files available from inside DOSBox.
- none
- DOSBox will make no attempt to read the file system on the disk. This is useful if you need to format it or if you want to boot the disk using the BOOT command. When using the 'none' filesystem, you must specify the drive number (2 or 3, where 2=master, 3=slave) rather than a drive letter. For example, to mount a 70MB image as the slave drive device, you would type:
'imgmount 3 d:test.img -size 512,63,16,142 -fs none'
(without the quotes). Compare this with a mount to read the drive in DOSBox, which would read as:'imgmount e: d:test.img -size 512,63,16,142'
.
- -size
- The Cylinders, Heads and Sectors specification of the drive. Only required to to create bootable hard disk images. This means it is not required for either loading a regular hard disk image or optical disc images.
- -u
- unmount an image.
- e.g. if an disk image was mounted to be the disk drive a: type:
'imgmount -u a'
Optical disc images
Loading an ISO image
An example in Windows
Open Ima Files Online
Other example in Windows (more than one image)
An example in Unix
Loading more than one image
Cutting board designer keygen download pc. It is possible to mount more than one image, and then switch between them using ctrl-f4Example in Linux:
Czi Matlab
![Files Files](https://www.mirametrics.com/help/mira_pro_x64_8/source/dlg_file_open_hyak120.png)
Loading a CUE image
An example in Windows
An example in Unix
Note: make sure to use CUE and not BIN for Mixed Mode CDs
You can mount bin/cue type CD images with the IMGMOUNT command, and it will 'sort of' work if you specify the .bin file as the file to mount. However, it will not mount the audio tracks of the CD correctly if you do this. Specifying the associated .cue file will load all tracks correctly.
Note: you can mount CUE with an ISO for Mixed Mode CDs
It is also possible to use a cuescheet in combination with an ISO and compressed audio tracks in OGG or MP3 format.
Open Ima Files 2017
Hard disk images
The '-size' parameter (required to to create bootable hard disk images)
Didn't understand the '512,63,16,142' part?
All you really need to know is that the formula is always:
X is the number of 'cylinders' in the image. It's based on the image's size. If you create the image through Bochs, then it would tell you the number of cylinders.
If you want to understand a little more, here's a more detailed explanation than the official one on the numbers.
Now, let's say you created a 70M image using the bximage program from Bochs. You will then get the following details:
You don't actually need to know the total numbers of sectors, other than to calculate the sector size (in bytes):
Now you have all you need.
Start the line with 512 and then add the 3 first parts in reverse order. In other words:
imgmount ... -size 512,63,16,142
- Here's a tip: the first 3 numbers should always be the same. So all you really need is the cyl=X. In other words, it should always be:
imgmount ... -size 512,63,16,X
- Only the X changes, according to the size you specify when you create the image.
That wasn't so hard, was it? ;-)
Loading a regular hard disk image
Example
Bootable hard disk images
Format the partition with 'format'
Start DOSBox again and type:
Exit DOSBox.
The hard disk image is now bootable! See Loading a bootable hard disk image.
Loading a bootable hard disk image
From now on, whenever you want to boot from drive C:, start DOSBox and type, for example:
Ima File Extension
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