Yes. Optical data is magnetic.
DVD
well derrr, YES save the pictures to 'My Documents' and then use your CD burning software to burn the pictures to a CD. HOPE THAT HELPED :-X
It depends primarily on how many pictures you intend to store on a single disc, the size of those pictures and where they will be viewed. Choosing one of the other will have no impact on the final quality of the pictures. While a DVD will hold several times the number of pictures of a CD, CD's can still hold a fair number of pictures. If you can fit all of the pictures you need onto a single CD, you are a little better off going with the CD. The reason is that most DVD players and DVD drives will read a CD, yet CD players and CD drives will not read a DVD. If you are sharing these pictures with someone that may only have a CD drive and not a DVD drive, the CD will give you greater compatibility. If you have too many pictures to fit on a single CD, you would still be okay sharing a DVD in most circumstances. Almost all drives installed in new computers over the past 7-10 years have been DVD drives. I think the DVD is better than CD, becaus of the better quality and bigger capacity...so if you want to burn more pictures onto a CD or DVD, you had better choose the DVD disc, hope these informs can help you.
cd's you can get them from most supermarkets blank cd's not dvd
dvd or usb amount of storage for pictures
Either, a DVD will allow the most amount of space.
Yes. Any type of data can be placed on a DVD.
No, as long as you have a CD/DVD drive that can write to discs, then it should work.
they develop motion pictures onto the disks for us to watch
You will need to save the pictures on a flash drive, CD, or DVD, in order to load them on an iMac.
I take it by burn you mean put your pictures on a CD. If your computer has a CD burner, you should have the software to burn pictures onto a CD. Once they are on the CD, you can view them on most DVD players. My DVD player will only show pictures that are saved in the jpg or jpeg format, so check the manual for your player. Also many digital cameras come with patch cords that plug into the side of the camera and the aux plugs on your TV.
A DVD (digital video disk) is used for video and audio media.