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SEMINAR ON CD WRITING TECHNOLOGY Presented By : Neelamani Samal
Did You Know ? 2/3 of the Business that lose their data for more than 7 days never reopen . The average cost of recovering data is Rs. 50000 per Gigabyte & that is just physical recovery  ; it does not include down time or any other additional cost you might have. 17% of data losses happen because of sabotage ,theft or viruses ; 1/6 of documented data losses happen because of technical failure ; 68% of the data losses are due to human errors . To avoid the repercussions of a data loss must take back up in regular intervals. So choosing the right back up device is vital. Before we choose we must know how the device works.
CD  as Back up Device The Compact Disk (CD) has recently celebrated 20 years since its  launch in October 1982  A CD can hold up 700mb of audio or data . CDs come at a cheaper price than any other backup devices. Any data in a CD can be retrieved faster than any other back up  devices  we may find. Nearly every system supports CD-ROMs. So, it is easy to install. CDs won’t ware out soon if you do not manhandle it. Compact size: only 12cm in diameter so they take up little storage space These features make CD-ROMs a staple of home & office computers.
Introduction The Compact Disk was developed jointly by Philips and Sony in1980. Primarily CD was used to store Audio. Even now as we store data on a  CD it is based on the concept of Audio CDs. Audio CDs were designed to hold over 80 minutes of high quality stereo audio. The audio is stored in a digital format so that noise is virtually non- existent. In 1984 , the CD-ROM  Yellow Book  specification was published  allowing the CD to be used for computer data storage applications. Since then several format have appeared including CD-ROM XA,CD-I,  Enhanced CD and Video CD.
CD Formats The Compact Disk supports a range pre-recorded formats for music, computer data, games and other applications. CD Audio  is the original format on which all other formats are based. CD Audio may also use  CD-Graphics  or  CD-Text  , while  CD-Extra  adds computer data to the audio. CD-ROM  is derived from CD Audio to store computer data for PC games and other applications . CD-ROM XA  is multimedia version of CD-ROM used as the basis for  CD-I, Video CD  and  Photo CD .  CD-I Bridge  allows the last two formats tp play on CD-I players.
Digital Audio Using digital technology the audio is stored not as an analog value but a number representing the amplitude of the audio signal at a particular time. The example shows the conversion of an analogue waveform to digital by representing each sample by a number. The upper limit of human ear is about 20kHz so the audio must be sampled at 40,000 times per second.  To reduce distortion each sample must be represented by at least a 16-bit number giving 65,536 values or (0-65,535) per sample. CD samples the audio 44,100 times per second .Te total information needed for 1second of audio is therefore , 44100 x 2 x 16 = 1411200 bits
When the laser beam falls on a pit the light is scattered and very little is reflected. The changing pattern detected is then converted into a series of zeros and ones, which are decoded by the player electronics. Sensitive controls of the radial position of the laser diode and the vertical position of the objective lens are used to ensure that the laser follows the pits accurately. All CDs are Constant Linear Velocity (CLV) of between 1.2-1.4m/s,which means that the pits retain the same geometry wherever they are on the disk and there will be no change in performance. Laser Technology The word LASER stands for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Lasers generate coherent light, i.e., light comprising photons with the same wavelength and in-phase. This allows thelight to be focused to a very small spot size. The minimum  spot diameter  can be calculated as the  wavelength  divided by the  numerical aperture  of the optics used.  A low power laser was used to read the audio and video information stored in pits in the disc surface. These pits measure about 0.5 microns in width. The pits are used to indicate whether a data bit is ‘0’ or ‘1’.  CD players use infra red light emitting diode lasers. The laser diode is mounted on a swivel arm ,which  can be moved in a radial direction to follow the pits . An  objective lens  is used to focus the laser beam on the pits. A  two way prism mirror  allows the reflected light to pass back to the  photo-detector.
CD Construction The compact disc comprises a sandwich as in the figure. A 1.2 mm thick polycarbonate substrate containing pits molded into the upper surface is coated with aluminum, which is then protected by a lacquer on which the disc label is printed. An infra red laser beam is focused on the pits through the clear optical grade polycarbonate plastic.
Individual tracks are subdivided into indexes. Usually a track will contain two indexes, 0 and 1. Index 0 marks the pause (normally 2 seconds) at the beginning of each track, while index 1 is for the main part of the track.  The Program Area on a CD can be divided into a maximum of 99 tracks, used to separate different items, e.g. songs, on the disc. Each track must be at least 4 seconds in length and a pause of 2 seconds may be inserted between tracks. Audio may be physically divided into tracks, with silence (pauses) in between, or run continuously between two or more tracks. Any track may be accessed rapidly and tracks may be played in random order.  Compact Disk Layout CDs measure 120mm in diameter with a 15mm diameter center-hole. The annular space between the center hole and outside of the disc is divided into 3 main areas all containing data : Lead-in ,  contains no audio data but does contain other information relating to the audio content. It is used to allow the laser pickup head to  follow the pits and synchronize to the audio data before the audio begins. Program area,  contains up to 74 minutes  of audio data. Lead-out  contains digital silence. Track start times (but not indexes) are defined in the Table of Contents in the Lead-in area. The TOC comprises absolute times for the start of each track and is used by CD-players to access individual tracks, allowing fast random access and features such as shuffle. The table of contents comprises the timecode for each track
File Systems ISO 9660   A group of interested parties formed the High Sierra Group and agreed on a proposal for a file system for CD-ROMs. This was then ratified, in a slightly modified form, by the International Standards Organization as recommendation ISO 9660. ISO 9660 is compatible with MSDOS, for example filenames can be in upper case only with 8 characters plus 3-character extension.  Joliet  •  Character Set limited to upper case characters, numbers and  underscore •  File Name Length limited to 8 characters plus three-character extension • Directory Tree Depth limitations  •  Directory Name Format limitations  Continued…
Hierarchical File System (HFS)  •  Supports subdirectories (called folders)  •  31 characters maximum per file name.  •  Volume names may have a maximum of 27 characters  •  HFS files have two forks; a resource fork and a data fork.  •  The data fork is used by an application to store the contents of the document. •  The resource fork of a file contains Macintosh resources, which are used by applications to identify the file type and to provide other related data.
Premastering CDs   •  CD Audio  premastering comprises audio editing and compilation, PQ encoding, audio transfer and sample rate conversion. Enhanced CD premastering involves adding the CD-ROM content to the audio tracks. •  CD-ROM  premastering can include formatting to ISO 9660/Joliet, Mac HFS. and hybrid ISO9660/Mac HFS, CD EXTRA premastering and virus checking •  Copy protection,  particularly for CD-ROM, requires a premastering stage for encrypting the content prior to glass mastering.
CD Audio Copy Protection  Most available copy protection systems make use of the differences between CD players and CD-ROM drives. The former stream audio from the CD continuously, while CD-ROM drives read the audio in ‘blocks’ and need to find the next ‘block’ of data by using the time-codes in the Q-channel. Also CD-ROM drives will look for the last session on a disc, but CD-Audio players will only read the first session of a multi-session disc.  Another technique is to introduce errors into the audio that are concealed by a CD player but not by a CD-ROM drive when the audio is ripped. A copy will then include ‘clicks and pops’ when played, but the original CD will not.
CD-ROM Copy Protection   Most technologies use encryption of the content with the key used to decrypt it ‘hidden’ on the disc as a digital signature  A software loader program is added to read the digital signature, extract the key and load and decrypt the main application.
The CD Books  1. CD Audio Books   The CD Audio books comprise the original Red Book and the Blue Book. Red Book   •  Audio specification for 16-bit PCM.  •  Disc specification, including physical parameters.  •  Optical stylus and parameters.  •  Deviations and block error rate.  •  Modulation system and error correction.  •  Control and display system (i.e. sub-code channels) & CD Graphics  Blue Book - Enhanced CD   •  Disc specification and data format for the two sessions (audio and data). • Directory structure (to ISO 9660) including the directories for CD Extra  information, pictures and data. It also defines the format of the CD Plus information files, picture file formats and other codes and file formats.  •  MPEG still picture data format.  Continued…
2. CD-ROM and CD-ROM XA Books   Yellow Book - CD-ROM • Disc specification, optical stylus parameters, modulation and error correction and control & display system (from Red Book) • Digital data structure, which describes the sector structure and the ECC and EDC for a CD-ROM disc.  White Book - Video CD •  Disc format including use of tracks, Video CD information area, segment  play item area, audio/video tracks and CD-DA tracks. •  Data Retrieval Structure, compatible with ISO 9660.  •  MPEG audio/video track encoding.  •  Segment play item encoding for video sequences, stills and CD-DA  tracks.  •  Play sequence descriptors for pre-programmed sequences.  •  Scan data (for fast forward/reverse) and closed captions.  •  Examples of play sequences and playback control.
Multisession CD   The multisession CD specification for pressed discs is a Philips/Sony standard (actually yellow in color) defining discs which have two or more sessions but are pre-recorded (pressed) and not recordable. The only pressed multisession disc format currently defined is the Enhanced Music CD, defined in the  Blue Book .  Orange Book Part III – CD-RW  The Orange Book Part III defines the CD-Rewriteable format, which can be written to, erased and overwritten with new data. CD-RW discs have a lower reflectivity than a pre-recorded CD,  •  Volume 1 defines recording speeds of up to 4 times nominal CD speed.  •  Volume 2 (High Speed) defines linear recording speeds between 4x and 10x  nominal CD speed. •  Volume 3 (Ultra Speed) defines linear recording speeds between 8x and 24x nominal CD speed.
Thank You ...

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Cd writning technology

  • 1. SEMINAR ON CD WRITING TECHNOLOGY Presented By : Neelamani Samal
  • 2. Did You Know ? 2/3 of the Business that lose their data for more than 7 days never reopen . The average cost of recovering data is Rs. 50000 per Gigabyte & that is just physical recovery ; it does not include down time or any other additional cost you might have. 17% of data losses happen because of sabotage ,theft or viruses ; 1/6 of documented data losses happen because of technical failure ; 68% of the data losses are due to human errors . To avoid the repercussions of a data loss must take back up in regular intervals. So choosing the right back up device is vital. Before we choose we must know how the device works.
  • 3. CD as Back up Device The Compact Disk (CD) has recently celebrated 20 years since its launch in October 1982 A CD can hold up 700mb of audio or data . CDs come at a cheaper price than any other backup devices. Any data in a CD can be retrieved faster than any other back up devices we may find. Nearly every system supports CD-ROMs. So, it is easy to install. CDs won’t ware out soon if you do not manhandle it. Compact size: only 12cm in diameter so they take up little storage space These features make CD-ROMs a staple of home & office computers.
  • 4. Introduction The Compact Disk was developed jointly by Philips and Sony in1980. Primarily CD was used to store Audio. Even now as we store data on a CD it is based on the concept of Audio CDs. Audio CDs were designed to hold over 80 minutes of high quality stereo audio. The audio is stored in a digital format so that noise is virtually non- existent. In 1984 , the CD-ROM Yellow Book specification was published allowing the CD to be used for computer data storage applications. Since then several format have appeared including CD-ROM XA,CD-I, Enhanced CD and Video CD.
  • 5. CD Formats The Compact Disk supports a range pre-recorded formats for music, computer data, games and other applications. CD Audio is the original format on which all other formats are based. CD Audio may also use CD-Graphics or CD-Text , while CD-Extra adds computer data to the audio. CD-ROM is derived from CD Audio to store computer data for PC games and other applications . CD-ROM XA is multimedia version of CD-ROM used as the basis for CD-I, Video CD and Photo CD . CD-I Bridge allows the last two formats tp play on CD-I players.
  • 6. Digital Audio Using digital technology the audio is stored not as an analog value but a number representing the amplitude of the audio signal at a particular time. The example shows the conversion of an analogue waveform to digital by representing each sample by a number. The upper limit of human ear is about 20kHz so the audio must be sampled at 40,000 times per second. To reduce distortion each sample must be represented by at least a 16-bit number giving 65,536 values or (0-65,535) per sample. CD samples the audio 44,100 times per second .Te total information needed for 1second of audio is therefore , 44100 x 2 x 16 = 1411200 bits
  • 7. When the laser beam falls on a pit the light is scattered and very little is reflected. The changing pattern detected is then converted into a series of zeros and ones, which are decoded by the player electronics. Sensitive controls of the radial position of the laser diode and the vertical position of the objective lens are used to ensure that the laser follows the pits accurately. All CDs are Constant Linear Velocity (CLV) of between 1.2-1.4m/s,which means that the pits retain the same geometry wherever they are on the disk and there will be no change in performance. Laser Technology The word LASER stands for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Lasers generate coherent light, i.e., light comprising photons with the same wavelength and in-phase. This allows thelight to be focused to a very small spot size. The minimum spot diameter can be calculated as the wavelength divided by the numerical aperture of the optics used. A low power laser was used to read the audio and video information stored in pits in the disc surface. These pits measure about 0.5 microns in width. The pits are used to indicate whether a data bit is ‘0’ or ‘1’. CD players use infra red light emitting diode lasers. The laser diode is mounted on a swivel arm ,which can be moved in a radial direction to follow the pits . An objective lens is used to focus the laser beam on the pits. A two way prism mirror allows the reflected light to pass back to the photo-detector.
  • 8. CD Construction The compact disc comprises a sandwich as in the figure. A 1.2 mm thick polycarbonate substrate containing pits molded into the upper surface is coated with aluminum, which is then protected by a lacquer on which the disc label is printed. An infra red laser beam is focused on the pits through the clear optical grade polycarbonate plastic.
  • 9. Individual tracks are subdivided into indexes. Usually a track will contain two indexes, 0 and 1. Index 0 marks the pause (normally 2 seconds) at the beginning of each track, while index 1 is for the main part of the track. The Program Area on a CD can be divided into a maximum of 99 tracks, used to separate different items, e.g. songs, on the disc. Each track must be at least 4 seconds in length and a pause of 2 seconds may be inserted between tracks. Audio may be physically divided into tracks, with silence (pauses) in between, or run continuously between two or more tracks. Any track may be accessed rapidly and tracks may be played in random order. Compact Disk Layout CDs measure 120mm in diameter with a 15mm diameter center-hole. The annular space between the center hole and outside of the disc is divided into 3 main areas all containing data : Lead-in , contains no audio data but does contain other information relating to the audio content. It is used to allow the laser pickup head to follow the pits and synchronize to the audio data before the audio begins. Program area, contains up to 74 minutes of audio data. Lead-out contains digital silence. Track start times (but not indexes) are defined in the Table of Contents in the Lead-in area. The TOC comprises absolute times for the start of each track and is used by CD-players to access individual tracks, allowing fast random access and features such as shuffle. The table of contents comprises the timecode for each track
  • 10. File Systems ISO 9660 A group of interested parties formed the High Sierra Group and agreed on a proposal for a file system for CD-ROMs. This was then ratified, in a slightly modified form, by the International Standards Organization as recommendation ISO 9660. ISO 9660 is compatible with MSDOS, for example filenames can be in upper case only with 8 characters plus 3-character extension. Joliet • Character Set limited to upper case characters, numbers and underscore • File Name Length limited to 8 characters plus three-character extension • Directory Tree Depth limitations • Directory Name Format limitations Continued…
  • 11. Hierarchical File System (HFS) • Supports subdirectories (called folders) • 31 characters maximum per file name. • Volume names may have a maximum of 27 characters • HFS files have two forks; a resource fork and a data fork. • The data fork is used by an application to store the contents of the document. • The resource fork of a file contains Macintosh resources, which are used by applications to identify the file type and to provide other related data.
  • 12. Premastering CDs • CD Audio premastering comprises audio editing and compilation, PQ encoding, audio transfer and sample rate conversion. Enhanced CD premastering involves adding the CD-ROM content to the audio tracks. • CD-ROM premastering can include formatting to ISO 9660/Joliet, Mac HFS. and hybrid ISO9660/Mac HFS, CD EXTRA premastering and virus checking • Copy protection, particularly for CD-ROM, requires a premastering stage for encrypting the content prior to glass mastering.
  • 13. CD Audio Copy Protection Most available copy protection systems make use of the differences between CD players and CD-ROM drives. The former stream audio from the CD continuously, while CD-ROM drives read the audio in ‘blocks’ and need to find the next ‘block’ of data by using the time-codes in the Q-channel. Also CD-ROM drives will look for the last session on a disc, but CD-Audio players will only read the first session of a multi-session disc. Another technique is to introduce errors into the audio that are concealed by a CD player but not by a CD-ROM drive when the audio is ripped. A copy will then include ‘clicks and pops’ when played, but the original CD will not.
  • 14. CD-ROM Copy Protection Most technologies use encryption of the content with the key used to decrypt it ‘hidden’ on the disc as a digital signature A software loader program is added to read the digital signature, extract the key and load and decrypt the main application.
  • 15. The CD Books 1. CD Audio Books The CD Audio books comprise the original Red Book and the Blue Book. Red Book • Audio specification for 16-bit PCM. • Disc specification, including physical parameters. • Optical stylus and parameters. • Deviations and block error rate. • Modulation system and error correction. • Control and display system (i.e. sub-code channels) & CD Graphics Blue Book - Enhanced CD • Disc specification and data format for the two sessions (audio and data). • Directory structure (to ISO 9660) including the directories for CD Extra information, pictures and data. It also defines the format of the CD Plus information files, picture file formats and other codes and file formats. • MPEG still picture data format. Continued…
  • 16. 2. CD-ROM and CD-ROM XA Books Yellow Book - CD-ROM • Disc specification, optical stylus parameters, modulation and error correction and control & display system (from Red Book) • Digital data structure, which describes the sector structure and the ECC and EDC for a CD-ROM disc. White Book - Video CD • Disc format including use of tracks, Video CD information area, segment play item area, audio/video tracks and CD-DA tracks. • Data Retrieval Structure, compatible with ISO 9660. • MPEG audio/video track encoding. • Segment play item encoding for video sequences, stills and CD-DA tracks. • Play sequence descriptors for pre-programmed sequences. • Scan data (for fast forward/reverse) and closed captions. • Examples of play sequences and playback control.
  • 17. Multisession CD The multisession CD specification for pressed discs is a Philips/Sony standard (actually yellow in color) defining discs which have two or more sessions but are pre-recorded (pressed) and not recordable. The only pressed multisession disc format currently defined is the Enhanced Music CD, defined in the Blue Book . Orange Book Part III – CD-RW The Orange Book Part III defines the CD-Rewriteable format, which can be written to, erased and overwritten with new data. CD-RW discs have a lower reflectivity than a pre-recorded CD, • Volume 1 defines recording speeds of up to 4 times nominal CD speed. • Volume 2 (High Speed) defines linear recording speeds between 4x and 10x nominal CD speed. • Volume 3 (Ultra Speed) defines linear recording speeds between 8x and 24x nominal CD speed.