rightable and rewightable
DVD plus RW has been developed by Sony, Dell, HP, Philips, and Mcft. The DVD minus RW standard was developed by Pioneer and is used by Apple as well. DVD minus RW can have one layer of data written to them, while DVD plus RW can have multiple layers of data written to them.
What_is_the_difference_between_a_cd_minus_R_and_a_cd_plus_R
DVD plus RW has been developed by Sony, Dell, HP, Philips, and Mcft. The DVD minus RW standard was developed by Pioneer and is used by Apple as well. DVD minus RW can have one layer of data written to them, while DVD plus RW can have multiple layers of data written to them.
CD-R is Compact Disk - Read CD-RW is Compact Disk - Read, Write
Yes. There is no difference that I know of between a DVD burned on a computer DVD burner and a DVD burned on a "tv" DVD burner.
When you buy a DVD-Ram you have to make sure that it is rated for DVD+/-RW, it usually says in on the computer, or on the box itself (if you bought the DVD-Ram separately) Most new DVD-Ram drives have DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-RW, DVD-DL, DVD+DL. But there are some companies that haven't implemented the + and the -
A DVD-R is a DVD that is writable only once, but a DVD-RW is one that you can write to multiple times, with each rewrite the size decreasing somewhat.
Put it into a DVD player or a computer that has a DVD drive in order to read the information on it. The "RW" means re-writable. Meaning you can erase the information on it and use it again.
Unfortunately not, once a DVD+R is written that's it. However, if you have room left on it, that is recordable. In order to re-record on a DVD, you will need to acquire a DVD+RW (or DVD-RW) depending on your DVD Recorder....Hope this helps...
It has to be a DVD-RW or DVD+RW. R means Writable, RW means Re-Writable.
No. An ISO image can be burned to a CD-R, CD-RW, or even writable DVDs (DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD-RW, DVD+RW).
No.