Most likely, your computer is not a CD-RW burner, so it can play it, but not edit things on it. My suggestion, put it into a CD-RW burner or DVD Player with burner, then try again.
i have nooo clue there is something called try using google wattt:P
Since the only difference in your detail - is the amount of memory (4GB against 2GB) - go for the 4GB machine. The extra memory will help Windows 7 run faster.
If you are running Windows XP you can right click on the file and choose "send to" and then choose "CDRW Drive" if you are running and older version of Windows you will need CD Burning software such as Roxio Easy CD Creator to name just one.
Nothing. It will not be recognized.
it can be used to write rewritable cd's
The Pyle can play CDRW's containing MP3's and WMA's, but can't play OGG's just yet.
Cdrw dvdrw
well, it depends on what kind of softwear you had to burn your cd.
I believe that if you simply explore your cdrw in a separate window, you can just right-click the single picture and say "delete." I've done this before and I've never had a problem with it. good luck!
To burn a CD from the command prompt in Windows, you can use the built-in cdrecord command or a third-party tool like ImgBurn. First, ensure you have the necessary software installed. Then, open the command prompt and navigate to the directory containing your files. Use a command format like cdrecord -v dev=/dev/cdrw -data yourfile.iso to start the burning process, replacing yourfile.iso with your specific file path.
CDRW and DVDRW
There is no way possible of burning a ps3 game to a cdr. Its in blu-ray format so not even half the data on the blu ray disc will fit into the cdr There is no way possible of burning a ps3 game to a cdr. Its in blu-ray format so not even half the data on the blu ray disc will fit into the cdr