Neither. Both ROM and RAM are memory. A CD is a form of storage, which has nothing to do with memory.
No, only CD-RWs are rewritable.
CD = Compact Disk ROM = Read Only Memory Together CD-ROM means a compact disc made into a read only memory device. Rewritable cd's are not cd-roms as they are memory devices that can be rewrote to.
It's like a cd Rom but you ram it in your butt cheeks
There is no CD-RAM, because there is only CD-ROM for forms of cds, instead the application that the CD runs would be using RAM so that is the closest thing to the existence of CD-RAM.
I think it means it's not rewritable.
cache
The CD ROM connects to the computer via a ribbon cable.
Any discs that have "RW" on them. An example "CDRW" - Compact Disc, ReWritable
Random Access Memory (RAM) can have some of your own information saved to it. Read-Only Memory (ROM) cannot have any information saved to it as it has its own information. For example: CD - ROM
i think in RAM. Or ROM. Or CD-disk. Etc.
Once CD's have data put on them, it cannot be erased. On rewritable CD's, the reflective layer on the bottom of the disc is a different compound that, when hit by the CD drive's laser at increased power, will melt, erasing data so something else can be written in its place.
ROM, as in CD-ROM, refers to the way in which you access the stored data, i.e. Read-Only Memory. RAM (Random Access Memory) is the amount of memory a computer can access to complete a given action. The more RAM, the quicker the action can be performed.