[Home]Compact disc

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Changed: 1c1
An [optical disc]? used to store music and data. Commonly abbreviated CD. Compact discs are made from a thin disc of polycarbonate and a metal layer in the middle of the disc. They are available in a range of sizes but the most commonly available by a long way is 120mm in diameter. A 120mm disc can store about 74 minutes of music of about 650 megabytes of data.
An [optical disc]? used to store music and data. Commonly abbreviated CD. Compact discs are made from a thin disc of polycarbonate and a metal layer in the middle of the disc. They are available in a range of sizes but the most commonly available by a long way is 120mm in diameter. A 120mm disc can store about 74 minutes of music or about 650 megabytes of data.

Changed: 3c3,12
When they were first made (when was that?) it was not possible for users to record there own music or data on the disc, but now (in 2001) it is very easy using CD writers.
Compact discs cannot be easily recorded; they are manufactured by etching a glass plate and using that plate to press metal. However there are also CD-R discs, which can be recorded by a laser beam using a CD-R writer (most often on a computer, though standalone units are also available), and can be played on (most) compact disc players.


The correctness of the spellings "disc" and "disk" is not trivial, see http://www.bartleby.com/61/16/C0521600.html


See also CDDB, CD-ROM


/Talk?

An [optical disc]? used to store music and data. Commonly abbreviated CD. Compact discs are made from a thin disc of polycarbonate and a metal layer in the middle of the disc. They are available in a range of sizes but the most commonly available by a long way is 120mm in diameter. A 120mm disc can store about 74 minutes of music or about 650 megabytes of data.

Compact discs cannot be easily recorded; they are manufactured by etching a glass plate and using that plate to press metal. However there are also CD-R discs, which can be recorded by a laser beam using a CD-R writer (most often on a computer, though standalone units are also available), and can be played on (most) compact disc players.

The correctness of the spellings "disc" and "disk" is not trivial, see http://www.bartleby.com/61/16/C0521600.html

See also CDDB, CD-ROM

/Talk?


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Last edited October 19, 2001 11:59 am by 200.255.83.xxx (diff)
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