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ISA
Glossary DVD Formats CD-Recordable discs (CD-R) were introduced in 1988 and CD-RW (the re-writable version) was introduced about 15 years after the first read-only CD was launched. In addition, both write-once and re-writable DVD discs are also available. There are several different formats.
Both recorders and discs for these
formats are available and include PC drives, video
recorders and camcorders.
DVD TECHNOLOGY
DVD and CD-ROM's
serve the same purpose, but in different ways. A DVD is
exactly the same size (physically) as a CD, but can store seven
times the data that a CD-ROM can. The disk itself is 120mm in
diameter and 1.2mm thick. It can store 4.7 gigabytes while CD-ROM
can only hold up to 800 megabytes.
The tracks in a DVD are placed much closer together than a CD with the pits and lands also being much smaller, thus allowing for more data storage. A DVD also allows information to be scanned from more than one layer of a DVD by changing the focus of the read laser. Instead of using an opaque reflective layer is uses a translucent layer with an opaque reflective layer behind carrying more data. However, this does not double the capacity of the disk because the second layer cannot be as dense as the single layer. An interesting feature of DVD is that the disks' second layer can be read from the inside of the disk out, as well as from the outside in. In an ordinary CD, the data begins reading from the center (the hub) of the disk and goes out. A DVD also
allows for double-sided capacity. This means that data can be
stored on both sides of the disk. To facilitate the focusing of
the laser on the smaller pits, manufactures used a substrate
thinner than that used in CDs, thus reducing the depth of the
layer of plastic the laser has to travel through to reach the
pits.
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