no
In May 2019, Panasonic, the only remaining manufacturer of DVD-RAM discs, announced that it would end production of DVD-RAM media by the end of that month, citing shrinking demand as the primary motivation.
does anyone even manufacture DVD-RAMs these days
what's the point of abstracting all the build machinery away when 9 out of 10 times you have to figure out how it works anyway, only now you have to comb through half a dozen barely documented .nix files – after first finding them of course – and a single-page manual, just to get a vague idea of how it all fits together
ethyl acetate might work too, and it's easy to find with reasonable purity, being a major part of nail polish remover
it might attack PTFE though
wondering whether using acetone or isopropanol to clean sticky polymerised fat off cookware is a very good or very very bad idea…
i can imagine toxic impurities being a problem, especially if you get your solvents from the hardware store or cleaning supplies shop; but you can get them in food-safe/pharmaceutical-grade varieties too
i can imagine acetone destroying PTFE coatings, since PTFE itself is a polymer, but i don't have any PTFE cookware except my airfryer and rice cooker
what about other materials? stainless steel shouldn't be a problem. neither should glass, which includes emamel coatings. raw ceramic and cast iron might be a problem since they're porous, but then again, these solvents evaporate pretty quickly.