no YLOD has to do with main motherboard so it does not affect disc drive you might have the disk stuck in the consol which is normal.
Many parts are still usable after YLOD and there are sites that repair YLOD for $99 if you have not done something trying to repair it yourself
You can use compression, but it can also affect the performance of the disk.
A disc drive serves an important purpose to all computers. A disc drive allows a computer to read CD's and play whatever content is on the disc. Without a disc drive, most computer software would not be able to perform.
Considering the YLOD (yellow light of death) indicates a debilitating malfunction with your system's hard drive and a solid red light means the system is off... I'd say it's infinitely worse. Best of luck to you!
To eject a disc from a Dell laptop, you can press the physical eject button on the disc drive, if available. Alternatively, you can right-click on the disc drive icon in "This PC" or "My Computer" and select "Eject." If the disc drive is not responding, you can use a paperclip to press the small emergency eject hole on the drive to release the disc manually.
If you have tried to eject a disc from the drive of your computer, but it will not eject, the best thing to do is take your computer or laptop to a repair shop. Trying to pull the disc out on your own might result in damage to the disc or the system.
It means that either no disc is inserted in the disc drive, or something is wrong with the ... When the disc is loaded and the drive spins up the stress from the lateral load put on the ... on the right side, it is a slot not a button pulls out at disc tray
It means that either no disc is inserted in the disc drive, or something is wrong with the ... When the disc is loaded and the drive spins up the stress from the lateral load put on the ... on the right side, it is a slot not a button pulls out at disc tray
If you open the disc drive and take the disc out, and spray compressed air all around inside. Tell me if this helped?
The disk drive doesn't. The operating system determines that there are no files on the disk.
Insert the disc into the disc drive.
Either you've got a weird/broken CD drive or your disc drive can't read that type of disc. Not all disc drives can read all types of disks.