yes you can play a CD on two computer by a cable
None, no computers HAVE to have a CD+RW/CD-RW drive but is is helpful to have one to burn cds and play them. None, no computers HAVE to have a CD+RW/CD-RW drive but is is helpful to have one to burn cds and play them.
Back in the day computers input data by a CD ROM. In today's computer all you have to do is have a hard drive.
Selinium (Se) and tellurium (Te) are both used in solar cells and are in the same group in the Periodic Table as sulfur. These two elements are commonly combined with cadmium (Cd) in solar cells (either CdSe, CdTe, or mixtures of Cd, Se and Te all together (usually written CdSexTe1-x).
ide/eide
Computers are connected via Internet,which is commmonly known as network of networks. In History,computers were connected via telnet and various other technologies. But Internet has become popular in very short time.
None, no computers HAVE to have a CD+RW/CD-RW drive but is is helpful to have one to burn cds and play them. None, no computers HAVE to have a CD+RW/CD-RW drive but is is helpful to have one to burn cds and play them.
CD-rom is a compact disk used with computers. =D
Yes, you can if both computers have/had windows xp.
No, it is not used on all computers it is only used on the computers that are specified on the website you download it from or if you buy it and then download it from your CD to your computer.
A computers DVD/CD Rom can play both DVD's and Cd's as well as computer programs
You can only use the CD Key once. The creator wants to make sure that you dont buy one CD and dowload it on your friends computers.
They're mainly used for computers that lack one (usually small netbooks) but could be used as secondary CD-ROM drives.
Define "old computers." CD-R(W) drives have been pretty common since at least 2001. Ones on computers before that are uncommon,but still possible, and one can usually be added to it.
It's hard to answer this question without more details. If both computers are Windows machines and they are part of a local area network, you can make the CD ROM on one computer a share that the other computer mounts. This will work for some installers and won't work for others. The best solution depends upon the answers to several question: What software are you trying to load? What operating systems are the computers running? Are the computers networked? Do you have any external storage device that you can connect to both computers, say by USB?
you put the CD in the CD slot.
Older computers used to only have one, but newer ones seem to have two (or one that is partitioned). Not entirely sure what you mean by 'what drive is this also known as' but I'd assume the letter reference which is C for the main one and D for the second one. In computers with only 1, D is generally used for the CD drive (and A for the floppy).
Back in the day computers input data by a CD ROM. In today's computer all you have to do is have a hard drive.