Title: | Welcome to the CD Notes Conference |
Notice: | Welcome to COOKIE |
Moderator: | COOKIE::ROLLOW |
Created: | Mon Feb 17 1986 |
Last Modified: | Fri Mar 03 1989 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1517 |
Total number of notes: | 13349 |
Me again. [8v)- Just read a short piece on CD-ROMS in a mag and thought I would pass on the info. to you. I expect there is a note on the underlying technology of CD's in this file, but that may well have been a long time ago. PRACTICAL COMPUTING, SEPTEMBER 1986 A CD-ROM disc holds information in pits that are burned into its surface. There is room for about 2 billion pits on a single disc. During the mastering process the pits are burnt into the surface of the master disc by laser beam. The lens controlling the laser beam moves radially while the disc spins, so the information is laid down in a spiral track. The surface profile of the master is then copied either by electro- plating or by photopolymer replication onto physical negatives. The CD-ROM discs themselves are mades out of a transparent polycarbonate plastic, and are usually formed from the negative by an injection- moulding process. The surface is the coated with a reflective layer of metal, usually aluminium, followed by a protective layer of lacquer. Most CD-ROM players use a small Gallium Arsenide semiconductor laser to generate the light beam which reads the information from the disc. Light striking the pits if diffracted, while light that strikes the area in between is reflected. A photo-detector collects the reflected light and generates a modulated signal corresponding to the pattern of the data recorded on the disc. This signal is the decoded and converted to digital data suitable for use by a computer. ENDS. The principle would be the same for audio-CD's except for the last sentence I suppose ?? BFN Peter Linton.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
432.1 | DEC top 40 | TOOK::APPELLOF | Carl J. Appellof | Wed Aug 20 1986 11:06 | 7 |
There is actually a CDROM notes file for discussing this sort of thing. DEC is into it in a big way. I just saw a copy of the VMS source listings on CD. It comes in a jewel box just like your home CDs. I hear it sounds terrible, though (even though it's DDD :-) | |||||
432.2 | Let's make money in the Art Music market | SARAH::EIRIKUR | Eir�kur Hallgr�msson | Wed Aug 20 1986 14:54 | 8 |
re .1: Someone should look into selling a few of those VMS source listing CD's to Newbury Comics :-). Even at our asking price ($400.00?) they'd probably sell out. There's stranger (well, almost) stuff in those bins at Newbury! | |||||
432.3 | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Wed Aug 20 1986 22:13 | 7 | |
I've played VMS. It was after a day of hacking on my Pro-350 here at home, and VMS was certainly music to my ears... Sorry, couldn't resist. It actually sounds quite a bit like spitting the taskbuilder out my Pro-350 TMS. /john | |||||
432.4 | re .3 | 31770::ZAHAREE | Could care less about apathy! | Thu Aug 21 1986 11:28 | 3 |
Sick. - M | |||||
432.5 | My oh my.... | 31770::ZAHAREE | Could care less about apathy! | Thu Aug 21 1986 11:31 | 3 |
PYRITE's network database is dated April 29?????????????????????????? - M |