Re: Pio DV-563A firmware fix
"[A]nother way" is what you've seen many
kvetching about for 2+ pages in this thread: send the unit to Pio.

Take a quickie read of the
Wikipedia page on ISO files. You're not opening or running the ISO file in the traditional .EXE file sense. All you need to do is put that ISO on a CD-ROM disc which the Pio then reads. There are two ways to do this based upon how Pio designed the player to read the file (and I don't remember which is the case):
1) The simple way (like Panasonic does with their Blu-ray player firmware upgrades) is to enable the player to just
read a copy of the ISO file. In this case, standard Windows writing software is all you need. Put a fresh CD-ROM in your drive, navigate to the ISO file on your computer and right-click on it, select "Send To . . ." and choose your ROM drive. Boom. Windows writes a copy of the file to the disc.
2) The slightly more complicated way (which Toshiba chose for their HD DVD player firmware upgrades) is to require the player to
read an image of the file. Unlike the option above, this is not like, say, copying a music CD. This option requires burning software, freeware and trial versions of which are available all over the 'Net. Popular choices include
IMGBurn and
Nero. Here's a link--generated by just Googling "ISO burn"--to information on other burning apps and step-by-step instructions:
How to Write ISO Files to CD.
Try option one. Make sure you use a clean, new disc. If it doesn't work, try option two. It's been so long I can't remember for sure but I think I created my disc using native Win XP writing capability (meaning no other app was required).
And again, if all this seems Greek to you, I can snail mail you the disc I still have that's worked on three different 563As. But eventually, what with the direction consumer electronics is going, I think we all might have to get familiar with firmware upgrades procedures. But this will eventually all probably be handled via the 'Net.