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.
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.
DOT (US Department of Transportation) standards have nothing to do with whether an incident is recordable under OSHA regulations.
Yes, it is an OSHA recordable.
If it is a prescription (per OSHA regs) then yes...it is recordable.
You are legally required to record and OSHA recordable case.
Chiropractic adjustment is OSHA Recordable if it used as the result of a workplace accident or injury.