If you have a disk stuck in a computer's disk drawer, look for a small hole somewhere near the drawer. Insert a straightened-out paper clip into this hole, and the disk drawer should open.
It will have a DVD mark on it.
No, a dvd device is either a DVD player, or a DVD drive on a computer.
There are three kinds of dvd players, computer dvd player, home theatre dvd player and car dvd player. Computer dvd player is divided into two kinds, desktop internal dvd player and laptop dvd player. Please vist eeshops.net for more details.
yes u can do so
yes but you need to have DVD player or other players
You will need to burn the files to a DVD for that you will need a DVD burner
No, But it does cost the price of a dvd and you have to have a computer with a DVD player to save the photos to a DVD.
You watch blockbuster movies on your computer by putting a blockbuster DVD into your DVD player
The best DVD player depends on the tastes of each person, to my opinion the best can be a DVD player or computer, these electronic devices have this player today is very necessary.
To play DVDs using the Player in XP, you must have a DVD-ROM drive and a software or hardware DVD decoder installed on your computer. By default, Windows does not include a DVD decoder.
No, you can't.
Regardless of your operating system you need to "master" the DVD in order to use it in a DVD player. On Windows, insert a blank DVD into a DVD-writable drive and allow the computer to ask what you want to do. Tell the computer to "Burn a DVD video disc," add the files that you want to burn onto the DVD. After the files are encoded, the files are burned onto the DVD and finalized (the reason why it is called "mastered"). The disc is now playable on a DVD player. On Mac OS X, insert a blank DVD into your computer's DVD-writable drive or SuperDrive and open iDVD. Follow the wizard or create a custom disc and click the "Burn" button on the bottom of the window. After the disc is burned (and technically finalized), the DVD is able to be used in DVD players.