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CD and DVD technology Presented By: Steve Mathieu Aaron Rinaca Mike Ferris Mike Burker

CD and DVD technology

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CD and DVD technology. Presented By: Steve Mathieu Aaron Rinaca Mike Ferris Mike Burker. Brief History of Compact Digital Media. 1980: The first Compact Disk player is produced by Sony/Phillips. 1982: The first Compact Disk is manufactured for sale, Billy Joel’s “52 nd Street” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CD and DVD technology

CD and DVD technology

Presented By:

Steve Mathieu

Aaron Rinaca

Mike Ferris

Mike Burker

Page 2: CD and DVD technology

Brief History of Compact Digital Media

1980: The first Compact Disk player is produced by Sony/Phillips.

1982: The first Compact Disk is manufactured for sale, Billy Joel’s “52nd Street”

1984: First portable Compact Disk players enter the market followed by car CD players shortly after.

1985: Sony/Philips announce the standard for compact disc storage of computer data, the CD-ROM

1987: Video CD format is designed.

1991: CD-R (Compact Disk Recordable) technology is introduced as a new storage technology.

1996: Digital Versatile Disk(DVD) technology is introduced

1997: DVD’s and DVD players begin to enter the market

1998: DVD Recordable systems invented and begin to enter the market

2000: DVD movies become mainstream and replace analog VHS as the format of choice.

Page 3: CD and DVD technology

Compact Disk (CD) Basics

•Uses Digital Technology to store data in binary values of Zero and One

•Uses “Pits” and “Lands” to signify binary values

•CD’s Read at a Constant Linear Velocity (CLV)

•Capable of Storing Large Amounts of Data (up to 700MB)

•Uses Error Correction for reliable data retrieval even if the CD becomes lightly scratched.

Page 4: CD and DVD technology

Types Of Compact DisksCD Audio – The first type of CD that was available. This allows for

the storage of digital audio. These are playable in all current CD drives and car audio systems including DVD players.

CD-ROM – Computer Data is stored on these units such as games, applications, and other files. Only readable on computers.

CD-R – Allows users to write data once to a recordable Compact Disk. Can not be re-written and can be read in all current players

depending on wither the disk holds Audio or Data.

CD-RW – Users Can Write and Re-Write these special disks. However because of the disk format, they cannot be read in Audio CD

players or DVD players.

Page 5: CD and DVD technology

CD Basic Technology Principles

This diagram shows the side view of a common CD.

Printed Label : The image on the top of the CD, more of a “secondary” protection device than anything else.Protective Lacquer: This protects the CD from scratches and helps reflect the CD player’s laser.Aluminum Layer: This is the reflective layer that primarily bounces the CD player’s laser back.Polycarbonate: Known industry wide as a very durable substance, Polycarbonate is a clear covering designed to protect the pits and lands in the CD surface.

Page 6: CD and DVD technology

CD Audio: How Does It Work?Sound is Sampled at 40,000 Times per Second or Higher

Each Sample Must be Represented by at least a 16-bit number

Therefore, with 40,000 samples per second, and 16-bits per sample,that’s over 640,000 bits per second! Therefore a 1 minute long

music clip would take over 38,400,000 bits (+/- 38MB) for storage!

Page 7: CD and DVD technology

Computer CD-ROM’s

Divided Into Sectors Containing User Data and Error Correction Codes. Set up similar to hard drives however they do not have a “FAT” sector,

instead sectors are opened and closed with special pit and land combinations.

File Systems are used to store data for easy and quick access

Page 8: CD and DVD technology

CD Recordable Basics

This diagram shows the side view of a common CD.

Printed Label : The image on the top of the CD, more of a “secondary” protection device than anything else.Protective Lacquer: This protects the CD from scratches and helps reflect the CD player’s laser.Gold Layer: This is the reflective layer that primarily bounces the CD player’s laser back.Dye Layer: This is burned into Dark or Light spots by the CD Recorder drive. Imitates lands and pits.Polycarbonate: Known industry wide as a very durable substance, Polycarbonate is a clear covering designed to protect the pits and lands in the CD surface.

Page 9: CD and DVD technology

CD-R Technology

Can Only Write Data Once

Uses Gold Instead of Aluminum for its Reflective Layer, thus a higher cost than traditional CD’s

Uses Dye to “trick” the CD player Laser into thinking it is passing over real Pits and Lands, when in actuality it is merely passing

over light and dark spots in the dye.

Page 10: CD and DVD technology

CD-RW Technology

Allows Users to Write Many Times (However This is Limited)

Uses Alloy of Sliver, Indium, Antimony, and Tellurium for Reflective Layer

Uses varying power levels to read and write lands and pits.

High Power = Creates PitsMelts Alloy and Converts it to a High-reflectivity Crystalline state

Medium Power = Creates LandsMelts Alloy and Converts it to Natural Crystalline state

Low Power = For Reading…no change to CD surface.No Change in Alloy

Page 11: CD and DVD technology

Error Correction, Why Bother?

Error correction is an imperative part of CD technology, you cannot take good enough care of a CD to prevent errors. Sony and Phillips knew this, so they instituted the basics of Error Correction Technology.

Errors can be caused by:Manufacturing defects (Rare)Scratches (Very Common)

Error Correction Types:CIRC – (Cross Interleaved Read-Solomon Code) encoderEFM Modulation – (Eight to Fourteen)

Page 12: CD and DVD technology

CIRC Error Correction:

Can correct Error Bursts up to 3,500 bits long (2.4mm in length)

Helps to compensate for Error Bursts up to 12,000 bits (8.5mm). These types of errors are typically caused by minor scratches.

Page 13: CD and DVD technology

EFM Error Correction Technology

Works to ensure Pits and Land Lengths are no Less Than 3 channel bits and no More Than 11 Channel Bits

Very widely used in portable CD players because it helps to reduce the skipping effect of jitter and distortions.

Page 14: CD and DVD technology

DVD is Born!If CD is so great…why change it? Space limitations plagued CD’s to a life only in the music market, Video producers could not fit full length movies on a CD.

•The goal of DVD was to create a “vastly increased capacity, with the ability to feature an entire movie in high-quality digital video on a single side of a disc.”•They also wanted...Brighter colors, sharper pictures, and outstanding audio quality•The goal was a 4.7 gigabyte capacity with the ability to hold hours of full motion video and sound

Page 15: CD and DVD technology

Obviously they did it…but how?• DVD uses Smaller pit

and land dimensions, therefore the laser must me exponentially more accurate than with CD’s.

• More closely-spaced tracks, called "track pitch"

• A shorter-wavelength laser

Page 16: CD and DVD technology

The Wavelength Issue:

•DVD Players and DVD-ROM drives use a laser that emits high intensity red light at 650 and 635nm vs the

780 nanometers for CD technology

•These shorter wavelengths are better at reading the smaller, densely packed together pits and lands.

•The laser assembly has been re-engineered to produce a more tightly focused laser beam

Page 17: CD and DVD technology

How Many Layers Would You Like?

As an interesting consequence of using the new lasers and the new DVD design elements, they found that multiple sides and layers could be stacked onto a single DVD disk. A total of 4 configurations were found to be viable:

Single Side, Single Layer Single Side, Dual Layer

Double Side, Single Layer Double Side, Dual Layer 

Page 18: CD and DVD technology

Single Side, Single Layer DVD

• Accounts for most DVD’s

• 4.7 GB of data capacity

• "7 times" the data capacity of today’s music CDs and CD-ROMs

Page 19: CD and DVD technology

Single Side, Dual Layer DVD

• 8.5 GB on one side

• additional 3.8 GB on the second layer

• more than "13 times" the capacity of today’s music CDs and CD-ROMs

Page 20: CD and DVD technology

Dual Side, Single Layer DVD

• 9.4 GB (4.7 on each side)

• provides a little more capacity

• Flipping the disc or having a DVD Player capable of two-sided playback is required

Page 21: CD and DVD technology

Dual Side, Dual Layer DVD

• Maximum capacity of 17GB (8.5GB on each side)

• Flipping the disc or having a DVD Player capable of two-sided playback is required

Page 22: CD and DVD technology

CD versus DVDGrudge Match of the Century!

Who has the advantage here?

Both discs are the same physical size (120 mm diameter & 1.2 mm thickness, which makes CDs compatible with DVD players. Both discs are made with the same basic technology and production processesBoth technologies read discs in the same mannerDVD software can be replicated from existing CD production facilities

However DVD has some tricks up its sleeves….

DVD can hold exponentially more data than a CD canDVD has Higher density data storage where smaller pits and smaller tracks in DVDs provide seven times storage alone compared to CDsDVD has less overhead & more area because the DVD’s error-correction scheme is more efficient and requires less storage space that can be used for other informationDVD can have Multi-layer storage whereas CD stores data on one layer on one side of disc. DVD can store up to two layers on up to two sides of the disc, which allows up to 4X the storage amount

Page 23: CD and DVD technology

Side By Side Comparison:

Page 24: CD and DVD technology

Could DVD replace CD Audio?

Simply Put…why SHOULDN’T IT? After all….

CDs can hold only 80 minutes of music, while DVDs can hold 7 hours of music at the same quality, or 80 minutes of music at better quality

DVD can record audio at better quality than CD because of increased sampling rate and quantization levels

DVD can record in surround sound (6 channels instead of 2)

DVD audio requires a player with a 192kHz/24-bit DAC

DVD drives can play CD audio so it is downwardly compatible technology. Unfortunately, CD drives cannot play DVD audio

Page 25: CD and DVD technology

DVD to surpass CD Video and VHS?

•DVD video is encoded in MPEG-2 format, while CD video is encoded in MPEG-1 format

•CD data capacity limitations make competing with DVD video in resolution and duration impossible

•DVD movies exceed VHS quality, while CD movies cannot match VHS quality

•DVD drives can play CD video, but CD drives cannot play DVD video

Page 26: CD and DVD technology

Is CD technology on the way out?

•CDs will continue to be a leading audio format in the recording industry for several years to come

•Recordable CDs will serve as excellent form of file storage

•More advanced applications will abandon the CD format, while smaller applications may stay will the CD format

•Newer players and drives that support new formats, yet providing backwards compatibility will prolong the CD format’s life

•Video games systems will move away from the CD format towards DVD, for example the new Sony Playstation 2 uses DVD technology as does the upcoming Microsoft X-

BOX and the next generation Nintendo system.

Page 27: CD and DVD technology

The future of DVD•DVD Video will become the leading format for the movie industry

•DVD-ROMs will become the mainstream for computer applications

•DVD will become the leading format for video game systems

•Recordable DVD will eventually be available to consumers

•Software projects containing a large amount of multimedia will take advantage of DVD’s high storage capacity

•DVD Audio will compete with the currently experimental Super Audio CD (SACD) technology.

Page 28: CD and DVD technology

The End