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If the disc is finalized, no further data can be added to it. Also, if your operating system does not natively support CD burning, you cannot drag and drop; you have to use a third-party program to write data to the disc.
CDs, DVDs, and Blu-Ray discs are called optical media for a reason. They use laser beams as a method of writing and reading data. When "burning" data onto an optical disc they engrave microscopic dashes and dots representing ones and zeroes.
Power2Go by Cyberlink is a CD and DVD burning software. Power2Go by Cyberlink can be used to burn data files, music files, and video files onto discs.
No. Formatting a disc creates a file structure that data will be written upon. However it is not necessary to format a CD or DVD, the file structure is burned onto it at the same time as the data is written.
No, you can't fit anything higher than 700 mb if the device is 700 mb
A regular 700mb cd will fit about 6.7 CDs onto one regular 4.7GB dvd
Because cdr discs only have MBs of space and DVD discs are in GBs
You actually have to download the updates from your player's manufacturer's website and burn the data onto a disc and then put it into your player. But players that are Wi-Fi enabled can receive and download their own updates
CDs and DVDs both use a storage technique called optical storage. The data is stored on the discs by burning microscopic holes on the exterior of the disc, invisible to the naked eye. CD and DVD readers then perceive these holes as data and displays it to the user or computer. This is why you "Burn" something onto a CD/DVD.
A CD drive is an optical drive (a piece of hardware that reads Compact Discs). A DVD drive is an optical drive (a piece of hardware that reads DVD Discs). There are lots of optical drives that can read both DVDs and CDs, some can even 'burn' information onto blank discs. ___________________ From: TheAllKnowingEye
You use Nero to burn the .ISO file onto the disk
No, the patches aren't incorporated onto the discs