Cooking a compact disc in a microwave is a horrible idea if a person expects to ever use the disc again. It will completely destroy the disc.
Yes! There is going to be a Portable Blu-Ray Disc Player in Late 2008.
place the disc in the laptop and open up the file from there you can move the pictures to were ever u want on ur computer
There is a Minecraft version for Wii, you just need the Homebrew channel to run it. It's called WiiCraft. Google it and you'll find instructions to download and install, and it's free!
Four-wheel disc brakes were introduced in 1965 on the Corvette. Some AMC vehicles had Disc Brakes, and the Studebaker Avanti also had Disc Brakes. I know of no other American vehicles in 1965 with disc brakes. FYI, the 1948 Tucker had Disc Brakes as standard equipment. Only 51 examples were ever made.
you run the disc under warm water and use a little soap to clean the disc i a circular motion with a cloth that will not produce lint NO Never ever EVER go in circular motions. you should always go from the outer center to the edge of the disc. circular motions will cause the reading tracks that store data will be overlapped and data will be lost.so do not i repeat do not go in circular motions. yes soap and water will work
You need the disc every time you want to play the game in the PS3. The game disc does not transfer to your harddrive and merely builds a file to store information that can not be put on the disc the can not be rewritten by the PS3. The Games upgrades are also stored in the harddrive file
to do this you must first save what ever is on the floppy disc onto your computer or laptop and then transfer the file from the floppy on to an empty CD disc and then it is done
A compact disc player could read no disc because there is no disc in the player. It could also read no disc because the disc in not compatible or readable.
Maybe you damaged and scratched the game disc
He did. Not sure which album,I think it is on the Crossroads 4 disc set.
The Bryan disc is a flexible disc or ring of titanium and Teflon that is used to replace the intervertebral disc in patients with degenerative disc disease.