No.
The Verbatim Dual Layer disc has two AZO recording layers on a single sided disc, providing nearly double the storage capacity of standard DVD R discs. Verbatim dual Layer discs are approved for high speed burning, up to 6X speed, allowing storage for up to 8.5GB of video.
They run on BluRay discs.
PS3 games are on Blu-Ray Discs
1)Have your composites out. 2)Plug your composites into a DVDR. 3)Plug your DVDR composites into a tv or computer to record. 4)Put a blank disc into the DVDR. 5)Press the record button on the DVDR to start recording. (DOES NOT WORK WITHOUT RECORD BUTTON)
You have to have a DVD player that can play PAL DVDs. Some dual format players, particularly sold in the US, convert the PAL format so it is output in NTSC format. The other type of dual format players output NTSC discs in NTSC format and PAL discs in PAL format. If you have a the first type your NTSC TV will display both (losing the benefits of the (slightly) higher definition in the PAL format). If you have the second type, you will need a dual format TV to play PAL discs. The second combination is more common in countries that used the PAL standard for terrestrial broadcast TV.
CDs cannot hold 4gb but a single layer DVDR can. CDs cannot hold 4gb but a single layer DVDR can.
PlayStation 3 can play Blu-Ray discs.
The BDXL format supports 100GB and 128GB write-once discs and 100GB rewritable discs for commercial applications. It was defined in June 2010.
PS2 are on DVD discs if that is what you mean. Badly scratched Game disc can make the PS2 not know the format, but it is just a bad disc
Verbatim is the root.
By default, Windows burns discs in the Live File Systemformat.