Depending on the DVD you may have:
4.7 GB (single-sided, single-layer - common) (Two hours of high quality video)
8.5-8.7 GB (single-sided, double-layer) (3.5 hours of high quality video)
9.4 GB (double-sided, single-layer) (4 hours of high quality video)
17.08 GB (double-sided, double-layer - rare) (8 hours of high quality video)
Double sided disks can be written on both sides, which is why they hold about twice as much.
movies !
5 times more
5 times more
DVD-RTAV is the directory where the .VRO file is stored in a DVD-VIDEO, typically produced in consumer A/V DVD recorders (not for a PC).
Yes, however it won't be stored in native DVD format.
Yes. Any type of data can be placed on a DVD.
A single-sided, single-layer Blu-Ray disc can hold about 25 GB compared to the 4.7 GB of a single-sided, single-layer DVD.
5 times more. Blu-Rays can hold up to 50GB
10.0000.00000
You have to have writable DVD's in order to be able to record on to them; there is no way to get around that aspect of it. Regular DVD's play or allow access to what is stored on them; a write can record to a DVD-RW but can not record or store to a regular DVD.
If MRI data is stored on tape, then it can't be played on any disc player. If the data is formatted as a television signal and then stored on a DVD, it is quite possible that the images can be played to a television.
Untouched DVD is the DVD file stored in computer hard disk without making any changes , ie, Not edited, Not ripped And it is the original file . :)