If the image is in DMG or ISO format, you need do.nothing at all., as OS X (especially Tiger) will let you mount the image directly. Now, if the image is in.toast (Roxio Toast) format, then you'll need to convert it; however, once you do, you can mount it like any other DMG or ISO image. If you download the image in.Windows., then you can either open the image there (using either MacDrive or UltraISO) and burn it (in the case of UltraISO, you can burn the image directly) or, if you're fortunate enough to have your target Mac in your network, you can drag-and-drop from the Windows machine to the Mac, given enough disk space on the target Mac (OS X supports SMB natively, just like its BSD relatives, hence reading Windows partitions is a cinch).
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Excellent virtual CD/DVD drive emulator. DAEMON Tools for Mac is the OSX version of the popular Windows CD/DVD emulators, DAEMON Tools. After installation all you have to do is browse to where your image file is saved on your Mac and 'mount' it as a virtual drive using DAEMON Tools.
This works with real Macs, fake Macs, G-series Macs, and Intel Macs just as easily, as it's a function of the operating system, not the hardware. Case in point: I have despaired in finding properly working Bit Torrent client software for OS X; yet there is no shortage of such software for Windows. All I did was rather easy, really; I shared my target BT downloads folder on the home LAN (it's on a Windows partition) and have my Windows machine do the downloading. Thanks to the SMB support, the lone Mac on the LAN can access that partition with no difficulty whatsoever, and I can pluck the completed downloads at need and drop them onto my desktop and double-click to mount them.