DVD+R discs must be formatted before being recorded by a DVD recorder.
You can do this with Windows by insterting the disc to the DVD drive on your computer. Then, click the Wondows Start Menu > Computer. Go to your DVD Drive. When you double click the DVD Drive it should automatically give you the option to format the disc.
DVD+R is a format for optical data storage. It is similar to, but incompatible with, the older DVD-R standard. A DVD+R is a write-once optical disc with 4.7 gigabytes (GB) of storage, generally used for non-volatile data storage or video applications.
CD-R DVD-RW DVD-R VCD
No.
Because DVD-R is already formatted. If you try to format it you will damage it permanently. You should write data on a DVD-r disk without formatting it.
It will say DVD-R or DVD on your burner.
they should be able to
Just ask it :) Look at the logo on the DVD-ROM drawer - the logos aren't the most obvious e.g. the DVD-R logo on mine is actually the word DVD over an oval which has the minus in the middle, whereas the + logo is the letters RW with 'DVD+ReWriteable' (in a ludicrously small font) underneath.
rightable and rewightable
If it is a recorder/player for the TV then DVD-R. If it is in your computer it doesn't matter. If you are having problems reading these disks, Your DVD recorder Requires Dual Format or is in need of replacement.
The formats are DVD-R and DVD+R (Plus DVD-RW, DVD+RW, and DVD-RAM, DVD-ROM) (Stolen from Answerbag) DVD+R is a DVD disc that allows multiple layers for one disc where as DVD-r only allows one layer. They will not compete to become the de Facto standard, because they are both here to stay. Multi layer DVD+R can allow extra capacity per disc than DVD-R hence its high cost! (Not stolen from Answerbag, but some technical site) DVD+R is a write-once format intended to be more compatible with more DVD players, though at this point it seems to be about even with DVD-R, which remains the most compatible computer-burned DVD format. The plus formats have the same data storage capacity as the minus formats (4.7GB)... (Wikipedia) ...But In October of 2003, it was demonstrated that double layer technology could be used with a DVD+R disc to nearly double the capacity to 8.5 GB per disc. Manufacturers have incorporated this technology into commercial devices since mid-2004 (DVD+R DL).
No. An AVI file might fit. MIGHT fit. However, a 4.7GB DVD-R or DVD+R would be better.
well kinda the same but u cant erase in the DVD plus