Nope - 'ROM' means Read Only Memory. The information is permanently written at the time the computer is built - think along the lines of a music CD. Once it's written, it cannot be changed.
True
A DVD ROM is a "Read only Memory*" it is the disk itself and as such it cannot burn anything. A DVD reader can only read DVDs. A DVD writer can write som recordable DVD formats.
One of the main formats used for CD- ROM is CD-R otherwise called Compact Disc-Recordable. This format allows a computer to write to the compact disc and any player use it.
The process of making a DVD-ROM is easy! You use a DVD Burning Software programto build a project. You add any files to the project that you would like, up to the 4.7 GB capacity of a recordable DVD. You burn the disc, and you have a DVD-ROM.
A cd ROM is a compact disc read-only memory and is a CD that can be read by a computer with an optical drive. ROM means the data on the cd is read-only or cannot altered or erased. They have a larger capacity, and can hold up to 700 MB. And can store many types of data. A cd r is used for writing music or data files to once CD-Rs work on machines that are marked as digital audio recordable machines, in computer drives marked as compact disc recordable, and in CD and DVD players that are compatible with CD-Rs.
No test is OSHA recordable, but the results may tell you that there is an OSHA recordable illness.
DOT (US Department of Transportation) standards have nothing to do with whether an incident is recordable under OSHA regulations.
CD-ROM is a read-only storage medium (CD-ROM is an acronym for Compact Disc Read-Only Memory). Floppy disks and hard-drives are both writeable mediums. Note that CD-R (Compact Disc Recordable) and CD-RW (Compact Disc Re-Writeable) are not the same as CD-ROM.
Yes, it is an OSHA recordable.
You are legally required to record and OSHA recordable case.
If it is a prescription (per OSHA regs) then yes...it is recordable.
Chiropractic adjustment is OSHA Recordable if it used as the result of a workplace accident or injury.