How to make a hybrid CD which will open on both PC and Macintosh
When you burn a CD from a windows-based computer which will be used on another windows-based computer, you can add autorun.inf and launch.exc files to cause the CD to automatically open on a selected page (file). You usually open on an index.htm file. However, when you put that same CD in a Macintosh computer it cannot read the autorun.inf file and opens a file list instead. (That is, a list of all the files in the folder. The list is in alpha-numeric order which usually puts files with number names in numerical order followed by word titles in alphabetical order.)
(If you need copies of autorun.inf and launch.exc files, click on the link.)
However, you cannot simply add a Mac OS-X equivalent of the autorun.inf and launch.exc files on the CD so that a Macintosh would open the CD on the selected file. (Mac OS-X is the operating system used for Macintosh.) As of this posting (8/2/06), there is no software available which you could add to your windows-based CD in order to tell a Macintosh computer to open on a specified file. But read onit may be coming.
Our Tentative (and not very sophisticated) Solution
For this illustration, we will assume that your home page file is index.html and your autorun.inf opens on index.html. When your CD is put into a windows-based PC, the home page will automatically open. However, when this same CD is put into a Macintosh, the user will only see a file list when the CD opens. Nonetheless, if the correct file is opened, the CD will operate normally. Therefore, you want to put the file which should be opened first at the head of the list where it will be easily seen. Secondly, you want to tell the Mac user that it is the file which should be opened. This is what you can do:
Help is coming
A much better solution is probably coming soon. Hopefully, it will then be as simple as adding several Mac 0s-X files to your CD. They would operate in the Macintosh world just the same as the autorun.inf and launch.exc operate on a windows-based computer. Either operating system would then open the home page automatically from the same CD.
Watch www.kelleycomputing.net. This feature may be coming on some of their new software. It will certainly make CDs more useful for all of us who are publishing books and websites in CD format.
Note: There are other options available, but they generally require an OS-X file format and the CDs should be burned using a Macintosh computer. We are trying to reverse that process and make a CD which was formatted and burned on a windows-based computer open on a Macintosh.

