No. If they were, they'd have no purpose, because wbfs manager 4.0 has gamecube iso support.
The archive bit is a file attribute in operating systems that indicates whether a file has been modified since the last backup. When a file is created or modified, the archive bit is set to "on" (typically represented as "1"). After a backup is performed, the archive bit is usually reset to "off" (or "0") to signal that the file has been backed up. This allows backup software to determine which files need to be backed up in subsequent operations.
Just another copy of the file.
The files which store the copy of your original data are called backup files. In windows backup files are created by NTbackup utility and windows backup and restore utilities. These backup files have .bkf file extension.
The "archive" attribute indicates whether a file should be backed up. When this attribute is set, it signals to backup systems that the file has been modified since the last backup and should be included in the next backup operation. In contrast, the "read-only" attribute restricts modifications to the file, while the "hidden" attribute simply prevents the file from being displayed in standard directory listings.
It usually is, but may exist in a different form in some operating systems.
Anal-file
File extention (.bak, .backup or similar) Size, depending on how big the backup is.. it can be as big as two terabytes (tb).
The best backup solution is to copy and paste documents. This makes it so if something happens to the original file, it can be replaced by the backup file you created.
backup
there is a program called dolphin (not to be confused with the KDE file manager) that is available via playdeb.net
backup
Backup and Restore Center in the Control Panel.