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3 answers

Besides what the others wrote, there is a physical method for assigning drive letters to disks, including CD/DVD drives, and even to shares on other networked computers so the shares show up as drive letters in Computer, rather than in the Network Shares folder.

Open Computer Management by right clicking on My Computer (XP) or Computer, (Vista). Then select Manage from the shortcut menu.

Once in Computer management, right click on a partiion, logical drive, volume, etc, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths. Do one of the following:

To assign a drive letter, click Add, click the drive letter you want to use, and then click OK.

To modify a drive letter, click it, click Change, click the drive letter you want to use and then click OK.

To remove a drive letter, click it, and then click Remove.

Note: Be careful when making drive letter assignments because many MS-DOS and Windows programs make references to a specific drive letter, for example, the path enviromental variable shows specific drive letters in conjunction with program names.

Hope this information helps. If you need further information utilize the Help and Support feature in your version of Windows. There is a wealth of information there and also links to the Online Windows Help and Support and the Microsoft Knowledge Base articles.

Good luck and have a nice evening.

2007-09-23 16:34:45 · answer #1 · answered by Serenity 7 · 0 0

as the other one answered that should work. If you check on those cd/dvd roms there are pins and jumper settings at the back of each drive. You can set is as a slave or master driver or however you wanted it by doin so. Im sure youll find it at the back and shows where to put the jumper as you desire.

2007-09-23 16:07:19 · answer #2 · answered by JaMnZ 2 · 0 0

Make DVD master and the other slave.

2007-09-23 16:03:23 · answer #3 · answered by XP4ME 2 · 0 0

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