types of optical disc drive are:
cd,dvd,blueray,cdr,cdrw,dvdrw,mp3,mp4
CD or compact disc DVD or digital versatile disc Mini SD
two types - magnetic in the form of magnetic tape,magnetic disc and optical in the form of compact disc.
The three main optical media types are CD (Compact Disc), DVD (Digital Versatile Disc), and Blu-ray Disc. These media types are commonly used for storing and playing back various forms of digital data, such as music, movies, software, and other files.
If you burn infected files onto an optical disc then those files remain infected and would remain on the optical disc permanently.
An optical storage device is an electro-mechanical unit that can save and retrieve (write and read) information on a special disc medium using a laser light. Optical drives are designed to work with several types of media: CDs ("compact disc"), DVDs (digital versatile disc" or "digital video disc") and Blu-ray discs.
An optical storage device is an electro-mechanical unit that can save and retrieve (write and read) information on a special disc medium using a laser light. Optical drives are designed to work with several types of media: CDs ("compact disc"), DVDs (digital versatile disc" or "digital video disc") and Blu-ray discs.
A compact disc is a type of optical disc. "Optical disc" is an umbrella term for any type of storage media which uses optical technology (as opposed to magnetic) for data storage. This includes but is not limited to DVDs, CDs, H-DVD, blu-ray, laser discs CDRW's, and DVDRW's
CD and DVD disks are used by optical disc drives.
CD in Tamil refers to a Compact Disc, which is a digital optical disc storage format used for storing and playing back audio, video, and other types of data.
CD-R (Compact Disc Recordable) and DVD-R (Digital Versatile Disc Recordable) are types of optical media that can only be written to once. Once data has been burned onto these discs, it cannot be erased or rewritten.
a File
An optical disc drive reads a disc by shining a laser on it and detecting the reflected beam. The reflectivity of a disc varies across its surface, which determines the intensity of the reflected beam. Photodiodes detect this reflected beam and produce electrical signals, which are interpreted as data.