Yes you can, assuming it is in a format legible by a PC. Place the CD into the CD/DVD player, and wait for the disk to spin up. On a PC (Windows), open My Computer, and left-click on the DC drive. You should see your folders and/or pictures appear in the window.
Select the pictures you want to move, and right-click them. Choose "Copy". Then, navigate to the folder you want to put the pictures in, right-click and select "Paste". Your pictures will be transferred then.
There'd be a few issues. There's no legal way for you to get a commercial game's ROM onto your computer - a ROM dumping device would still violate the DMCA, while illegally downloading / distributing (if peer-to-peer transfer is used) a ROM dump of someone else's game cartridge does too.
You need to download the files from the digital camera by either connecting the device or inserting the SD Card into the slot, if your computer supports the last option. Then, copy the files onto a blank CD or DVD.
To put music from a USB stick onto a CD, it must first be downloaded to the computer. Then the music files can be burned (downloaded) onto a CD using the CD-ROM.
If I was to purchase a computer that is a average desktop computer how much RAM and Rom should I have?
Yes, there's no real reason to believe a CD rom would be unable to hold a file in certain formats, all formats are digital in nature on a computer, stored in a binary format, and copied as such onto a CD ROM when it is mastered.
If your phone has a USB connection then you can plug it into a computer. Insert the disc you want the audio from into the cd-rom drive of the computer. Transfer the files from the disc's storage to the phone's storage.
no, ROM cannot be wriitten
ROM stands for Read only memory. Its not extra on your computer. Operating System cannot load into Ram from hard disk without help of Rom. Rom contains instructions which are used to start a computer
sadly... no
No dear computer don't have ROM
It shouldn't affect the ROM - ROM stands for Read Only Memory. The data in the ROM was written at the manufacturing stage of the computer, and viruses shouldn't be able to affect it.
Yes ROM is the memory that holds everything that tells your computer how to actually start up.