CD-ROM is a pre-pressed
compact disc that contains
data accessible to, but not writable by, a computer for data storage and music playback, the 1985
“Yellow Book” standard developed by
Sony and
Philips adapted the format to hold any form of
binary data.
[2]
CD-ROMs are popularly used to distribute computer
software, including games and multimedia applications, though any data can be stored (up to the capacity limit of a disc). Some CDs hold both computer data and audio with the latter capable of being played on a
CD player, while data (such as software or digital video) is only usable on a computer (such as
ISO 9660 format PC CD-ROMs). These are called
enhanced CDs.
Although many people use lowercase letters in this acronym, proper presentation is in all capital letters with a hyphen between CD and ROM. At the time of the technology's introduction it had more capacity than computer
hard drives common at the time. The reverse is now true, with hard drives far exceeding CDs,
DVDs and
Blu-ray, though some experimental descendants of it such as
HVDs may have more space and faster data rates than today's biggest hard drive.
CD-ROM format A CD-ROM sector contains 2,352 bytes, divided into 98 24-byte frames. Unlike a music CD, a CD-ROM cannot rely on error concealment by interpolation, and therefore requires a higher reliability of the retrieved data. In order to achieve improved error correction and detection, a CD-ROM has a third layer of Reed–Solomon error correction.[4] A Mode-1 CD-ROM, which has the full three layers of error correction data, contains a net 2,048 bytes of the available 2,352 per sector. In a Mode-2 CD-ROM, which is mostly used for video files, there are 2,336 user-available bytes per sector. The net byte rate of a Mode-1 CD-ROM, based on comparison to CDDA audio standards, is 44100 Hz × 16 bits/sample × 2 channels × 2,048 / 2,352 /8 = 153.6 kB/s = 150 KiB/s. The playing time is 74 minutes, or 4,440 seconds, so that the net capacity of a Mode-1 CD-ROM is 682 MB or, equivalently, 650 MiB.
A 1× speed CD drive reads 75 consecutive sectors per second.
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