it means it is not seeing and of your CD/DVD drives as being write capable, if you are sure you have the correct drive in, check that you are not using the wrong CD/DVD type. older DVD burners are bad about not working with the other format. -rw/-r or +r/+rw. if everything checks out try looking for a driver.
Yes, you can burn the Zumba DVD by first saving it in the drive of your computer. You can then use the suitable burning software to burn it on an empty DVD.
I guess you could try to pu it into the DVD drive if your computer has the CD and DVD combo drive I guess you could try to pu it into the DVD drive if your computer has the CD and DVD combo drive
Depends on what it is on your computer. On my computer it is my CD ROM drive, on my other computer it is a stand alone external hard drive. It can be a USB drive or just about anything. More information on what you have on your computer, the question could be correctly answered. Thanks Gene
Any hard drive can be assigned any letter. It is possible that drive Q could be a network location on another computer, or a virtual drive created by a program on the computer.
Binary code is the computers language. For example you sent 300mb from Drive C:/user to D:/Data The computer could end up transalting this to numbers us 0's and 1's.
Theoretically, you should be able to listen to music on your computer (since it doesn't use the disc drive) while burning a CD or DVD in the drive. However, burning also slows most computers down enough that music will skip, and probably you should not be trying to do much on your computer at all if you want to make sure the burn doesn't mess up. Just my experience though; maybe someone has a remedy.
If you are ripping CDs to your hard drive and then burning, yes, it would take away "space" (some of the memory) because the files are going into your computer first. If you are creating content on your computer and then burning, you'd already have the content in your memory. The physical act of burning the CD (not counting where the content is stored) will use some of your virtual memory and CPU. This is a temporary thing and would stop when your CD is done. So, if you're burning a CD, playing AfterLife and trying to do your taxes at the same time, your computer is going to slow down to a crawl.
If you own the computer then you could copy it to your hard drive(normally drive C:) or if you dont own the computer you could save it to your acct on the computer.
Well, honey, the Y drive on a computer is typically used as a network drive or a mapped drive that connects to a remote server or storage location. It could be set up by your IT department or by someone who knows their way around tech stuff. If you're having trouble finding it, just ask around or check your network settings - it's not hiding in the cookie jar.
The computer N drive is a network file storage area. To access the drive, you look in the 'My Computer' area on your computer.
what is the l drive in a computer
constantly save your work, and back it up on a hard drive and/or USB flash drive