yes
Notebook computers usually have hard drive capacities ranging from 160GB to 1TB. If the notebook is going to be a desktop replacement, one should go with one that has a larger hard drive.
A CD, DVD or Blu-ray drive (optical drive) that is installed in the computer.The alternative is an external drive, which is a separate box you connect to the computer using a USB cable.
A CDROM drive is neither an input device or an output device. A CDROM drive is a storage device.
Each IDE connector on the board supports two channels per. (Two drives) The combination of drives can vary. For instance, hard drive-cdrom, hard drive-hard drive, cdrom-cdrom, ect....ect.
Yeah a computer and a labtop both have a notebook installed
Computers can only play Blu-Ray discs if their optical drive is a Bluray drive rather than a DVD.
Hard drive, ROM (read-only memory) and RAM (random access memory)
Flip the laptop over so that the rubber feet are facing up. Remove the screw in the center of the laptop with the picture of a lock near it. This is the only thing keeping the cdrom drive from sliding out of the laptop. If it doesn't come out easily, you may need to power up the laptop, open up the cdrom tray, power off the laptop (while the cdrom tray is still open) then repeat procedure above - however, you'll now have the cdrom tray to use as a handle to pull out the entire cdrom drive.
None, unless you leave a disc in the cdrom drive.
If it is an external hard drive, then the computer should be able to take it. However, if it is an internal hard drive, you will have to check the system requirements of your computer.
You can share a folder on either of your computers and use that folder to transfer data either wirelessly or through LAN cable.
Internal Drive