no
No it does not
You will need an external USB CD player.
Two ways: -pick up an inexpensive external CD drive and use that to install the CD -put the CD into a shared CD drive on another computer, and connect to that drive over a network.
It is impossible to go to a previous version of Microsoft Word but all you have to do is put a newer version's CD in drive and then it should autorun but if not click your start button then run and type your CD drive letter. ex: D:
No. Microsoft is a company.
Four devices that can read information from a CD are a CD player, a computer's CD-ROM drive, a DVD player (which is also compatible with CDs), and a game console that includes a CD drive, such as the PlayStation or Xbox. These devices use lasers to read the digital data encoded on the CD's surface.
Microsoft surface released?
it depends. are you using a DVD/ CD player? or are you using just a plain CD player? if ur using the CD player, it wont work because it doesn't have a screen. if your using a DVD/ CD player, it will work just fine. A DVD will not play in a CD-only player -- even a CD-ROM drive that does not have DVD hardware built in. The stepper motors and lenses for a DVD-ROM drive are far more precise than a CD drive, and the CD drive cannot physically read the tiny information on the DVD surface.
Not necessarily. You can have a CD/DVD reading drive that does not write.
the CD drive has lasers which read the CD, so the CD has pieces that can be read.
Nobody knows what Microsoft will do. However there is something called a Live CD. When a Live CD is booted.it loads into and runs in memory without involving the hard drive.
Microsoft Surface was created in 17-04.