A hole. Not everything needs an official name.
A cd. A donut. A lifesaver.
The flat spots on a CD are called pits and lands. These pits and lands are etched onto the surface of the CD to store digital information in the form of binary code.
Most CD players use electromagnetic switches called relays. Have you ever turned on the power on your CD player or another appliance, and heard a click immediately before it went on? That's a relay doing its job. In a relay, a small current runs through a coil which is right next to a switch with a magnet in it. The coil pulls on the switch, closing it and turning on the device. Relays are useful because they use a small current to control a much larger one. As a result, they are often used in the power supplies of electronic devices such as CD Players
This kind of chemical reaction is usually called "displacement" and sometimes "substitution".
A buffer for a writing error in a CD is a small amount of memory where data is stored temporarily before being written to the CD. This buffer helps to prevent errors by providing a temporary space for data if there are interruptions in the writing process. If an error occurs during the write process, the buffer can help ensure that the data is not lost.
tecnolgy
On the face of the cd player, look for a small hole. With the power off, insert a paperclip in the hole, turning the gears to push the cd out of the player.
Blop is the answer
Blop is the answer
On the door of every CD drive there is small hole, about the size of a paper clip. This is a manual release. Gentle press the end of a paper clip or small wire into this hole, and the CD door will release and you can slide it gently open.
Look at your CD player and search for a tiny hole near the CD player. This is designed to allow you to open the CD player when it is stuck. Insert a small pin or paper clip into the hole and the CD player should open up.
use a small bent paper clip or other thing ans press it in the small hole next to the eject button and it shuld pop out the CD form the drive
Look at the front of the cd player very closely. There should be a very small hole. With the power turned off, stick a straightened paper clip in the hole to push the gears and make the drawer slide out.
There is a small hole in the front of the drive, just small enough for a paper-clip wire. Straighten a paper clip and push it in the hole until the drive opens.
there is a little hole under the CD door, push something thin there and the door will open. Gently push the end of an opened (unbent) paper clip into the small hole on the front of the door. It doesn't take much pressure.
The hole in the CD is where the machine you put it in "grips" the CD so the disk can be spun and thus read and used.
there is a small hole near to the tray button. just use the hook or small needle try to get into there. it will suspect like a wheel just move it. CD tray will open now.