![]() ![]() The funny thing is, people around here don’t know me as a singer. You’re church services are so fun … I had no idea you could sing! Worship has been a big part of my life. What follows is an excerpt from our original interview with the man who is passionate about making new history in Midlothian, Texas. Yet, after having met Pastor Mac, it makes sense. He’s the kind of person that challenges the status quo and shatters stereotypes with an abundance of grace.įor these reasons and many more, our editorial team selected One Church as our Church Spotlight in URBANwell Magazine Vol. When God called him out to the country, he wasn’t even in this country. He grew up in Terrell, went to university in Austin and began his professional career as a worship leader in Dallas. Most people in town know him as “Pastor Mac.” Z:\>IMGMOUNT D ~/Documents/IMAGE.Folks in Midlothian, Texas are having conversations about “making new history.” The dialogue was initiated by Demetrius McClendon, senior pastor of One Church. The quotes around pathname can be omitted if CD name has no special characters. Mac OSX Z:\>MOUNT C ~/DOSGAMES Z:\>MOUNT D "/Volumes/Panzer General" -t cdrom The disc label in this example is "DOOM2_V17A". For example, a DOOM II disc shows up as /media/DOOM2_V17A. If you insert a disc in the CD ROM or DVD ROM drive and mount it on your Linux system, or have it set up to auto-mount when the disc is inserted, then use Nautilus to browse to the /media directory, you will see the label of the CD as a folder therein. Note that the Linux path is absolute and case-sensitive. Z:\>MOUNT D /media/CD_LABEL/ -t cdrom -usecd 0 -ioctl Z:\>IMGMOUNT E ~/IMAGES/MYIMAGE.ISO -T ISO Use this command instead, replacing values as appropriate for your system: Open the CD-ROM in Nautilus (or your preferred file manager) to determine its label. This is because CD-ROMs are mounted based on their label and do not share a common mount point. Users of the current version of Ubuntu (9.10 Karmic Koala) may notice that the above command doesn't work. Linux Z:\>MOUNT C ~/DOSGAMES Z:\>MOUNT D /MEDIA/CDROM/ -T CDROM When mounting multiple images (useful for any application which requires discs to be swapped while it is running), you can then switch between the mounted disk-images by pressing Ctrl+F4 (by default) while your application is running. Mounting multiple images (ISO or CUE/BIN) Z:\>IMGMOUNT E C:\Images\MyImage1.iso C:\Images\MyImage2.iso -t iso It is also possible to use a cuescheet in combination with an ISO and compressed audio tracks in OGG or MP3 format. The BIN-file has to be in the same folder as the CUE-file. Z:\>IMGMOUNT E C:\Images\MyImage.cue -t iso Since ISO can only contain pure data, the image has to be in the CUE/BIN format. If the game plays additional music tracks from the cd ( mixed mode), you can still mount it as an image file. Mounting an ISO-File as volume Z:\>IMGMOUNT E C:\Images\MyImage.iso -t iso Mounting a CUE/BIN-Pair as volume Z:\>MOUNT D D:\ -t cdrom -usecd 0 -ioctl -label GAME_CD ioctl = Lowest level of hardware access (Win 2K, XP and Linux).follows the -usecd command label = Set the volume name of the drive (all caps) cd = Generate a list of local CD ROM drive's "drive #" values usecd For direct hardware emulation ie: audio playback, etc. Mounting a specific folder from your hard drive Z:\>MOUNT C C:\DOSGAMES Mounting a specific folder and setting the amount of free space for a drive Z:\>MOUNT C C:\DOSGAMES -freesize 1024 Mounting a floppy drive Z:\>MOUNT A A:\ -t floppy Mounting a CD ROM drive Z:\>MOUNT D D:\ -t cdrom Extra CD ROM options -t Define how the mounted folder should behave to the emulated operating system. Usage examples Windows Mounting the working directory from which DOSBox was started Z:\>MOUNT C. 1.1.9 Mounting multiple images (ISO or CUE/BIN).1.1.8 Mounting a CUE/BIN-Pair as volume.1.1.3 Mounting a specific folder and setting the amount of free space for a drive.1.1.2 Mounting a specific folder from your hard drive.1.1.1 Mounting the working directory from which DOSBox was started.
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