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Digital information is encoded at near-microscopic size, allowing a large amount of information to be stored. CDs record binary data as tiny pits (or non-pits) pressed into the lower surface of the plastic disc; a semiconductor laser beam in the player reads these. Most CDs can not be written with a laser, but CD-R discs have colored dyes that can be "burned" (written to) once, and CD-RW (rewritable) discs contain phase-change material that can be written and overwritten several times. Most CD-ROM drives can read CD-R discs; modern drives carrying the MultiRead mark can read CD-RW discs.
A CD-ROM can be burned or pressed. Small production runs are burned; larger runs are pressed. The break-even point seems to be somewhere between 100 and 500 copies [1], [2].
The standard CD-ROM can hold approximately 650-700 mega bytes of data, although data compression technology allows larger capacities. CD-ROM is popular for distribution of large databases, software and especially multimediaMultimedia is the use of several different media to convey information ( text, audio, graphics, animation, video, and interactivity). Multimedia also refers to computer media. As the information is presented in various formats, multimedia enhances user ex applications. A CD weighs under an ounce. To put the CD-ROM's storage capacity into context, the average novelA novel is a long or extended work of fiction written in prose, usually in the form of a story. It is longer and more complex than a short story or novella (ie. 40,000+ words), and it is not bound by the restrictions of plays and poetry. The word "novel" contains 60,000 words. Assume that average word length is 10 letters - in fact it is less than 10 - and that each letter occupies one byte. A novel therefore might occupy 600,000 bytes. One CD can therefore contain over 1,000 novels. If each novel occupies half an inch of bookshelf space, then one CD can contain the equivalent of about 15 yards of bookshelf. Textual data can be compressed by more than a factor of ten, using computer compression algorithms (often known as zipping), so a CD-ROM can accommodate at least 100 yards of bookshelf space. A DVD-ROMDVD-ROM is a non-volatile optical data storage medium similar to CD-ROM. Like CD-ROMs, they use a similar technology of microscopic pits on a reflective surface that are read by a laser beam. The difference is that DVD-ROM allows information to be stored can contain ten times as much data as a CD-ROM.
CD-ROMs are read using CD-ROM drives, a now-common computer peripheralFor an account of the word "periphery" as it is used in biology, sociology, politics, computer hardware, and other fields, see the periphery disambiguation page. A peripheral is a type of computer hardware that is added to a host computer, in order to exp, and, in the case of burning, are burned with CD-Recorders, commonly referred to as CD Burners. CD-ROM drives are rated with a speed factor relative to music CDs (1x or 1-speed which gives a data transfer rate of 150 kilobytes per second in the most common data format). Above 12x speed, there are problems with vibration and heat. Constant angular velocity (CAV) drives give speeds up to 20x but due to the nature of CAV the actual throughput increase over 12x is less than 20/12. 20x was thought to be the maximum speed due to mechanical constraints until February 1998, when SamsungSamsung Korean Name Revised RomanizationSamseong McCune-ReischauerSamsong Hangul Hanja Samsung is one of the largest electronics companies in the world. Founded in March 1938 in Daegu, Korea, it operates in around 58 countries and it has over 201,000 work Electronics introduced the SCR-3230, a 32x CD-ROM drive which uses a ball bearing system to balance the spinning disc in the drive to reduce noise.
CD-ROM drives may connect to an IDE ( ATA) interface, a SCSI interface or a proprietary interface, such as the Panasonic CD interface. Most CD-ROM drives can also play audio CDs.