Yes
An Audio CD is a type of CD that has audio files on it that can be read by a CD player like a stereo
It is nonvolatile, if you turn off the computer, the disc is not erased. (if you have a dvd bluray or cd and you turn off the cd, dvd, or bluray player the songs or movie on the disc is not erased). It does not use electrons to store data, it uses grooves and bumps in the disc and is read with a laser
no
No, not to my knowledge. A CD-R can only be recorded and read. It can't be erased, reformatted, or re-recorded. In order to have the files no longer "readable", the CD would have to be destroyed. I have heard, however, that age or storage conditions can make a CD unreadable. I believe the files are still there, but the CD is damaged in some way.
An optical storage medium such as a CD or DVD can store audio and video files, respectively. DVD's are also capable of storing images and other data.
That is impossible on a CD-R. Once written to, files on the CD-R cannot be modified. You should be able to modify them on a CD-RW, but this requires support from the operating system for CD-RW drives.
Optical media.
You can store files on CD-RW and also CD-R. Flash drives are a little better though.
Cd-rw
Yes, you can put MP3 files on a CD, but the computer will only be able to read them, not a CD player or DVD player. You would be better off by putting those files onto a program that allows you to burn CD's such as iTunes or Windows Media Player, and add them to your library and then burn them onto the CD that way, so your CD player will be able to read the format.
well if the bluray dvd is also comaptble cd then yap you can. Search Nero Info Tool on softpedia, it will let you know the reading capability of your drive.
If you are buring data on a CD-R it's by default read only. Thus, use a CD-R (not CD-RW) and use just the standard windows recording tools (drug and drop, or send to).