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Colin F Hughes Phd, BSc(Hons), MBCS, MIEEE
(Authored 18th June 1997)
1. Introduction
Optical media technology has been in existence since the late
1970's. Examples of this are audio CD and video based Laserdisk produced by
Phillips. Technological and market trends show an increase in the use of optical
media. The majority of software providers perceive optical media as a standard
distribution media and hardware suppliers regard it as standard inclusion in
any new system.
The first CD-ROM was pressed in 1982. Standards such as ISO
9660 'High Sierra' have been in place from the late 1980's. All CD-ROM drives
are manufactured to read and write this ISO standard. Hence produced disks will
be readable on a variety of platforms. This is of importance to organisations
providing multi-platform solutions.
2. The Limitations
Now that CD-ROM is well-established as a data storage medium it's physical
limitations are driving new advances in optical storage. The two main areas
that are being addressed are :
- Data transfer speed (basic CD ROM drives provide a transfer rate of up to
156Kb/sec), now ten speed drives manufactured by Plasmon are able to increase
the data transfer rate.
- Capacity is restricted to about 650Mb. This equates to 70 minutes of video
imagery at a slow bit rate, unacceptable for the entertainment industry.
3. The Solution
DVD (Digital Video (or Versatile) Disc) is destined to be the next optical
technology to supersede CD-ROM. Initially the format was derived for the entertainment
industry. Ideas from the original CD storage mechanism is merged with the latest
1990's storage technology. This involves, reducing track size, using a shorter
wavelength laser and relying on a more efficient error detection and correction
technique.
DVD has a basic storage of 4.7Gb (this is seven times the original CD). Physically
DVD and CD-ROM look the same (hence current CD-ROMs should be backwardly compatible
with DVD drives). However DVD discs spun at three times the speed. This correlates
to a data transfer rate of 1,108K/sec, compared to basic CD-ROM of 153.6K/sec.
Additionally DVD can hold up to 133 minutes of MPEG-2 video with three encoded
soundtracks (can be coded with Dolby's 5-track surround-sound AC-3 standard).
This extra capacity is achieved from reducing track pitch from 1.6 micrometres
to 0.74 and inter pit spacing has also been halved (from 0.85 micrometres to
0.4 micrometres).
Previous CD-ROM speed was dependant upon infrared lasers. Now visible light
semiconductors mass producing a wavelength 650nm and 635nm can read these smaller
features. New data encoding techniques more efficient data storage. Solomon
Product code (RS-PC) error correction gives an efficiency of up to ten times
that of previous error correction/detection on current CD system.
The expectation is that DVD technology will be initially driven by the entertainment
industry. The first products from this technology are expected early 1997. However
it is likely that the drive reliability will increase and prices fall before
the technology is a 'defacto' standard in the optical storage industry.
4. CD-ROM vs DVD : A Comparison
Please find detailed below a comparison between DVD and CD-ROM technology :
| Feature |
CD |
DVD |
| Disc Diameter (mm) |
120 |
120 |
| Disk Thickness (mm) |
1.2 |
1.2 |
| Disc Structure |
single substrate |
two bonded 0.6mm substrates |
| Laser Wavelength |
780 (infrared) |
650nm and 635nm (red) |
| Numerical Aperture |
0.45 |
0.6 |
| Track Pitch (micrometres) |
1.6 |
0.74 |
| Reference Speed (m/sec) |
1.2, CLV |
4.0,CLV |
| Number of Data Layers |
1 |
1 or 2 |
| Data Capacity |
650Mb (approx) |
4.7Gb(one layer) 8.5Gb(two layers) |
| Reference User Data Rate |
153.6 (Mode 1) |
1,108 (Mode 1), 176.4 (Mode 2) |
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