Most system software is installed from a CD or a DVD.
absolutely idiotic , softwares can be downloaded and installed or by memory card pen drive external hard disk etc
The main benefit of using MagicISO software is the ability to access software that is normally only accessible by using a CD or DVD in a CD or DVD drive. The software replicates the exact contents of the CD/DVD on your hard drive whilst making the operating system think its actually a virtual CD/DVD drive.
Kind of a tricky question. Analysis: you typed ROM Software. What is it you are trying to do. DVD ROM software will do you no good for a CD and vice versa. Additional Info: A DVD will hold at least 4.7GB. A CD will hold only 700MB. Since you stated ROM, I can only deduce that you are not trying to store information, but rather READ from the device.
Your laptop's DVD (or Blu-Ray) player would need to be one that can write/rewrite CD's and DVD's. If it does have that, either the laptop's pre-installed software, or a third-party software you can use to burn into a disk.
DVD did not replace CD, DVD is a movie, CD can be anything like a software downloader ir music.
You need a video camera to make videos - Connect you video camera to your lHP Laptop - and if you have CD/DVD burning software installed on your HP Laptop, you could then burn your video onto a CD/DVD
Desktop computers can only run if they have a functioning operating system. The size of moden operating systems means that it can only be installed from a CD or DVD.
A DVD-R burner, software and a DVD-R disk. The software can be found anywhere for free. The hardware(DVD-R) burner needs to be purchased at a store along with the disk. Once you have installed the hardware and software just place the files on the disk.
a CD is 700 megabytes and uses an infrared laser. a DVD is about 4.5 gigabytes and uses a red laser commercially Dvd's are for movies and new software and Cd's are used for music and older software
Yes, as long as that computer has a CD or DVD writer and software.
No. The DVD has more bits-per-inch than the CD reader hardware can handle.