Certainly. CDs and CD-RWs usually hold between 650 and 700 Mb of data.
The laser in the drive is the device that actually reads or writes data from and to the CD/CDRW/CDR.
It is a CD, DVD, Blue Ray, CDR, CDi, CDRW, DVDRW, MP3, MP4, or any of a dozen other varieties of laser data readers.
Nothing. It will not be recognized.
it can be used to write rewritable cd's
The Pyle can play CDRW's containing MP3's and WMA's, but can't play OGG's just yet.
Cdrw dvdrw
There are several kinds of CDs. Stamped (store bought) CD that come with data on them, are not writable, or erasable. They are manufactured with the data already on them. CDR discs can be written with a computer drive, but in general, they cannot be erased. They can be damaged where they can't be read back though. CDRW discs can be written to and then erased and re-written. You need software on the computer to do that though. Look into Nero burning ROM. It's a very good program for doing what you want here, assuming you are using CDRW discs.
An average CD can hold 700 MB of data.
around 12 700mb cds can hold 8 GB data
well, it depends on what kind of softwear you had to burn your cd.
I believe that if you simply explore your cdrw in a separate window, you can just right-click the single picture and say "delete." I've done this before and I've never had a problem with it. good luck!
to place data on hold while you prepare to receive it.