
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- Duration: 7:35
- Published: 29 Jun 2008
- Uploaded: 13 Apr 2011
- Author: youngnewtonian
Name | CD-ROM |
---|---|
Created | 1985 |
Type | Optical disc |
Capacity | 194 MiB (8 cm)650–900 MB (12 cm) |
Read | 150 KiB/s (1×)10,800 KiB/s (72×) |
Write | 150 KiB/s (1×)8,400 KiB/s (56×) |
Standard | ISO/IEC 10149 |
Use | Data storage, video, audio, open internet |
CD-ROMs are popularly used to distribute computer software, including games and multimedia applications, though any data can be stored (up to the capacity limit of a disc). Some CDs hold both computer data and audio with the latter capable of being played on a CD player, while data (such as software or digital video) is only usable on a computer (such as ISO 9660 format PC CD-ROMs). These are called enhanced CDs.
Although many people use lowercase letters in this acronym, proper presentation is in all capital letters with a hyphen between CD and ROM. At the time of the technology's introduction it had more capacity than computer hard drives common at the time. The reverse is now true, with hard drives far exceeding CDs, DVDs and Blu-ray, though some experimental descendants of it such as HVDs may have more space and faster data rates than today's biggest hard drive.
ISO 9660 defines the standard file system of a CD-ROM, although it is due to be replaced by ISO 13490 (which also supports CD-R and multi-session). UDF extends ISO 13346 (which was designed for non-sequential write-once and re-writeable discs such as CD-R and CD-RW) to support read-only and re-writeable media and was first adopted for DVD. The bootable CD specification, to make a CD emulate a hard disk or floppy, is called El Torito.
CD-ROM drives are rated with a speed factor relative to music CDs (1× or 1-speed which gives a data transfer rate of 150 KiB/s). 12× drives were common beginning in early 1997. Above 12× speed, there are problems with vibration and heat. Constant angular velocity (CAV) drives give speeds up to 30× at the outer edge of the disc with the same rotational speed as a standard constant linear velocity (CLV) 12×, or 32× with a slight increase. However due to the nature of CAV (linear speed at the inner edge is still only 12×, increasing smoothly in-between) the actual throughput increase is less than 30/12 – in fact, roughly 20× average for a completely full disc, and even less for a partially filled one.
Problems with vibration, owing to e.g. limits on achievable symmetry and strength in mass produced media, mean that CDROM drive speeds have not massively increased since the late 90s. Over 10 years later, commonly available drives vary between 24× (slimline and portable units, 10× spin speed) and 52× (typically CD- and read-only units, 21× spin speed), all using CAV to achieve their claimed "max" speeds, with 32× through 48× most common. Even so, these speeds can cause poor reading (drive error correction having become very sophisticated in response) and even shattering of poorly made or physically damaged media, with small cracks rapidly growing into catastrophic breakages when centripetally stressed at 10,000 – 13,000rpm (i.e. 40–52× CAV). High rotational speeds also produce undesirable noise from disc vibration, rushing air and the spindle motor itself. Thankfully, most 21st century drives allow forced low speed modes (by use of small utility programs) for the sake of safety, accurate reading or silence, and will automatically fall back if a large number of sequential read errors and retries are encountered.
Other methods of improving read speed were trialled such as using multiple pickup heads, increasing throughput up to 72× with a 10× spin speed, but along with other technologies like 90~99 minute recordable media and "double density" recorders, their utility was nullified by the introduction of consumer DVDROM drives capable of consistent 36× CDROM speeds (4× DVD) or higher. Additionally, with a 700mb CDROM fully readable in under 2½ minutes at 52× CAV, increases in actual data transfer rate are decreasingly influential on overall effective drive speed when taken into consideration with other factors such as loading/unloading, media recognition, spin up/down and random seek times, making for much decreased returns on development investment. A similar stratification effect has since been seen in DVD development where maximum speed has stabilised at 16× CAV (with exceptional cases between 18× and 22×) and capacity at 4.3 and 8.5GiB (single and dual layer), with higher speed and capacity needs instead being catered to by Blu-Ray drives.
A 1× speed CD drive reads 75 consecutive sectors per second.
0xff00ffffffffffffffff00ff
{|class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center;float:left;" |- |Layout type |colspan="6"| ← 2,352 byte block → |- ! CD digital audio: |style="background:#fff;" colspan="6"|2,352Digital audio |- ! CD-ROM (mode 1): |style="background:#fc0;width:3em;"|12Sync. |style="background:#0cf;width:1em;"|4Sector id. |style="background:#fff;width:16em;"|2,048Data |style="background:#0f0;width:1em;"| 4Error detection |style="background:#396;width:2em;"| 8Zero |style="background:#9c0;width:7em;"| 276Error correction |- ! CD-ROM (mode 2): |style="background:#fc0;width:3em;"|12Sync. |style="background:#0cf;width:1em;"|4Sector id. |style="background:#fff;" colspan="4"|2,336Data |}
CD-ROM discs are read using CD-ROM drives. A CD-ROM drive may be connected to the computer via an IDE (ATA), SCSI, S-ATA, Firewire, or USB interface or a proprietary interface, such as the Panasonic CD interface. Virtually all modern CD-ROM drives can also play audio CDs as well as Video CDs and other data standards when used in conjunction with the right software.
CD-ROM drive can sometimes be a misnomer for newer drives that are capable for reading and burning DVDs, the CD's successor which is now the standard optical disc drive.
CD-Recordable drives are often sold with three different speed ratings, one speed for write-once operations, one for re-write operations, and one for read-only operations. The speeds are typically listed in that order; i.e. a 12×/10×/32× CD drive can, CPU and media permitting, write to CD-R discs at 12× speed (1.76 MiB/s), write to CD-RW discs at 10× speed (1.46 MiB/s), and read from CD discs at 32× speed (4.69 MiB/s).
The 1× speed rating for CD-ROM (150 KiB/s) is different than the 1× speed rating for DVDs (1.32 MiB/s).
{| class="wikitable right" border="1" |+ Common data transfer speeds for CD-ROM drives ! align="right"| Transfer speed !| KiB/s !| Mbit/s !| RPM |- ! 1× | 150 | 1.23 | 200–500 |- ! 2× || 300 || 2.46 || 400-1,000 |- ! 4× || 600 || 4.92 || 800–2,000 |- ! 8× || 1,200 || 9.83 || 1,600–4,000 |- ! 10× || 1,500 || 12.3 || 2,000–5,000 |- ! 12× || 1,800 || 14.7 || 2,400–6,000 |- ! 20× || 1,200–3,000 || up to 24.6 || 4,000 (CAV) |- ! 32× || 1,920–4,800 || up to 39.3 || 4,800 (CAV) |- ! 36× || 2,160–5,400 || up to 44.2 || 7,200 (CAV) |- ! 40× || 2,400–6,000 || up to 49.2 || 8,000 (CAV) |- ! 48× || 2,880–7,200 || up to 59.0 || 9,600 (CAV) |- ! 52× || 3,120–7,800 || up to 63.9 || 10,400 (CAV) |- ! 56× || 3,360–8,400 || up to 68.8 || 11,200 (CAV) |- ! 72× || 6,750–10,800 || up to 88.5 || 2,000 (multi-beam) |}
There has been a move by the recording industry to make audio CDs (CDDAs, Red Book CDs) unplayable on computer CD-ROM drives, to prevent the copying of music. This is done by intentionally introducing errors onto the disc that the embedded circuits on most stand-alone audio players can automatically compensate for, but which may confuse CD-ROM drives. Consumer rights advocates are as of October 2001 pushing to require warning labels on compact discs that do not conform to the official Compact Disc Digital Audio standard (often called the Red Book) to inform consumers which discs do not permit full fair use of their content.
In 2005, Sony BMG Music Entertainment was criticised when a copy protection mechanism known as Extended Copy Protection (XCP) used on some of their audio CDs automatically and surreptitiously installed copy-prevention software on computers (see 2005 Sony BMG CD copy protection scandal). Such discs are not legally allowed to be called CDs or Compact Discs because they break the Red Book standard governing CDs, and Amazon.com for example describes them as "copy protected discs" rather than "compact discs" or "CDs".
Software distributors, and in particular distributors of computer games, often make use of various copy protection schemes to prevent software running from any media besides the original CD-ROMs. This differs somewhat from audio CD protection in that it is usually implemented in both the media and the software itself. The CD-ROM itself may contain "weak" sectors to make copying the disc more difficult, and additional data that may be difficult or impossible to copy to a CD-R or disc image, but which the software checks for each time it is run to ensure an original disc and not an unauthorized copy is present in the computer's CD-ROM drive.
Manufacturers of CD writers (CD-R or CD-RW) are encouraged by the music industry to ensure that every drive they produce has a unique identifier, which will be encoded by the drive on every disc that it records: the RID or Recorder Identification Code. This is a counterpart to the SID—the Source Identification Code, an eight character code beginning with "IFPI" that is usually stamped on discs produced by CD recording plants.
Category:Optical computer storage Category:Optical computer storage media
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