Most blank CDs are not double-sided. If you have one that is indeed double-sided, then yes.
data is stored on a CD with etches every etch is a 0 every non etch is a 1.
When data first started getting put onto compact discs in 1985 (until which time their sole purpose was for music), a typical CD held 74 minutes of music, or 650 million bytes of data. Today, your typical standard CD-ROM holds 80 minutes of music and 700 million bytes of data.
they store data and they spin when in use, thats about it.
http://portables.about.com/od/mp3players/ht/howtoripCDWMP10.htm
A computer stores information in form of bits, in different ways. For example, on a hard disk, where your information is stored in the long term, the information is stored through magnetization, while on a CD, of the printed type, each bit of information is stored by the presence or absence of a hole.
no. but some DVD can.
data is stored on a CD with etches every etch is a 0 every non etch is a 1.
No one side only. The shiny side.
No. There aren't any CD's that contain data on both sides, because the tehnology doen't allow it. There are lightscribe discs though. these are blank on both sides. Where one side is for data, and the other is for printing a label.
Magnetic
if there is nothing on it then you can burn files to it
MP3 format data can be stored on a CD and played back on any MP3 compatible CD player.
Data can be stored on floppy disk, hard disk, memory stick, CD or DVD.
roughly 700MB
can be broken hackers can keep their software hide in cd can be pickpocket if the cd get scraties it can lose data stored in cd
Yes. Any type of digital data can be stored on a CD-R
The CD uses very different technology to the tape (digital vs analogue). However, it is possible to have a 2 sided CD (just as there are many 2 sided DVDs).