No. There's no file system on it, and thus nothing to read.
Unless you have a dual CD drive system, you will have to copy [rip] the 1st CD onto your hard drive, then copy [burn] those files onto the blank CD. If you have a dual drive system, insert the 1st CD into the read only drive and the blank into the CD-RW drive and transfer the data.
Hard drive is not read nor recognized by the system.
1. Hard drive is not read nor recognized by the system.
Hard drive is not read nor recognized by the system.
You can write to a flash drive and read data from the flash drive. It acts the same as a miniature hard drive, just like the one on your computer. It uses flash memory, hence the name flash drive.
Read/ write drives allow you to write DVDs. ROMs only read.
Your CD/DVD player is a Read Only Memory drive.
For 'blank' read 'planet'. And yes, it does.
That is the very definition of "read-only." You can look at it, but you can't change it. If you have sufficient privileges over the file, and it is on a rewritable medium (hard drive, floppy, USB drive, etc...), you can uncheck the Read-only flag in the file's Properties page.
A CD drive is an optical drive (a piece of hardware that reads Compact Discs). A DVD drive is an optical drive (a piece of hardware that reads DVD Discs). There are lots of optical drives that can read both DVDs and CDs, some can even 'burn' information onto blank discs. ___________________ From: TheAllKnowingEye
read in complete sentences
A blank ROM (Read-Only Memory) that can be programmed once only is typically referred to as PROM (Programmable Read-Only Memory). Once programmed, the data is permanently written and cannot be altered or erased. It is often used in applications where data integrity is crucial and is designed for specific tasks that do not require updates. This makes PROM suitable for firmware storage and similar applications.