Information about Cd Rom
| Optical disc authoring | |
|---|---|
| Optical media types | |
| Standards | |
| |
Although many people use lowercase letters in this acronym, proper presentation is in all capital letters with a hyphen between CD and ROM. It was also suggested by some, especially soon after the technology was first released, that CD-ROM was an acronym for "Compact Disc read-only-media", or that it was a more 'correct' definition. This was not the intention of the original team who developed the CD-ROM, and common acceptance of the 'memory' definition is now almost universal. This is probably in no small part due to the widespread use of other 'ROM' acronyms such as Flash-ROMs and EEPROMs where 'memory' is the correct term.
Media
Data is stored on the disc as a series of microscopic indentations ("pits", with the gaps between them referred to as "lands"). A laser is shone onto the reflective surface of the disc to read the pattern of pits and lands. Because the depth of the pits is approximately one-quarter to one-sixth of the wavelength of the laser light used to read the disc, the reflected beam's phase is shifted in relation to the incoming beam, causing destructive interference and reducing the reflected beam's intensity. This pattern of changing intensity of the reflected beam is converted into binary data.
Standards
There are several formats used for data stored on compact discs, known collectively as the Rainbow Books. These include the original Red Book standards for CD audio, White Book and Yellow Book CD-ROM. The ECMA-130 standard, which gives a thorough description of the physics and physical layer of the CD-ROM, inclusive of CIRC and Eight-to-Fourteen Modulation, can be downloaded from [1].ISO 9660 defines the standard file system of a CD-ROM, although it is due to be replaced by ISO 13490. UDF format is used on user-writeable CD-R and CD-RW discs that are intended to be extended or overwritten. The bootable CD specification, to make a CD emulate a hard disk or floppy, is called El Torito. Apparently named this because its design originated in an El Torito restaurant in Irvine, California.
CD-ROM format
A CD-ROM sector contains 2352 bytes, divided into 98 24-byte frames. The CD-ROM is, in essence, a data disk, which cannot rely on error concealment, 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.[1] A Mode-1 CD-ROM, which has the full three layers of error correction data, contains a net 2048 bytes of the available 2352 per sector. In a Mode-2 CD-ROM, which is mostly used for video files, there are 2336 user-available bytes per sector. The net byte rate of a Mode-1 CD-ROM, based on comparison to CDDA audio standards, is 44.1k/s×4B×2048/2352 = 153.6 kB/s. The playing time is 74 minutes, or 4440 seconds, so that the net capacity of a Mode-1 CD-ROM is 682 MB.A 1x speed CD drive reads 75 consecutive sectors per second.
CD sector contents
- A standard 74 min CD contains 333,000 blocks or sectors.
- Each sector is 2352 bytes, and contains 2048 bytes of PC (MODE1) Data, 2336 bytes of PSX/VCD (MODE2) Data, or 2352 bytes of AUDIO.
- The difference between sector size and data content are the Headers info and the Error Correction Codes, that are big for Data (high precision required), small for VCD (standard for video) and none for audio.
- If extracting the disc in RAW format (standard for creating images) always extract 2352 bytes per sector, not 2048/2336/2352 bytes depending on data type (basically, extracting the whole sector). This fact has two main consequences:
- Recording data CDs at very high speed (40x) can be done without losing information. However, as audio CDs do not contain a third layer of error correction codes, recording these at high speed may result in more unrecoverable errors or 'clicks' in the audio.
- On a 74 minute CD, one can fit larger images using RAW mode, up to 333,000 × 2352 = 783,216,000 bytes (747~ MiB). This is the upper limit for RAW images created on a 74 min or 650~ MiB Red Book CD. The 14.8% increase is due to the discarding of error correction data
- Please note that an image size is always a multiple of 2352 bytes (the size of a block) when extracting in RAW mode.<ref >Optical Media FAQs (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-01-06.
| Layout Type | ← 2,352 bytes block ? | |||||
| CD Digital Audio: | 2,352 bytes of Digital Audio | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD-ROM (MODE1): | 10 | 4 | 2,048 bytes of user data | 4 | 8 | 276 |
| CD-ROM (MODE2): | 12 | 4 | 2,336 bytes of user data | |||
| Legend (bytes) | |
|---|---|
| 12 | sync |
| 4 | sector ID |
| data | |
| 4 | error detection |
| 8 | blank/null |
| 276 | error correction |
Manufacture
Pre-pressed CD-ROMs are mass-produced by a process of stamping where a glass master disc is created and used to make "stampers", which in turn are used to manufacture multiple copies of the final disc with the pits already present. Recordable (CD-R) and rewritable (CD-RW) discs are manufactured by a similar method, but the data is recorded on them by a laser changing the properties of a dye or phase change material in a process that is often referred to as "burning".
Capacity
A standard 120 mm CD-ROM holds 650 or 700 MiB of data. To put this storage capacity into context, the average novel contains 100,000 words. Assume that average word length is 10 letters and that each letter occupies one byte. A novel therefore might occupy 1,000,000 bytes (1000 kB, without layout information). One CD can therefore contain around 700 novels. If each novel occupies at least one centimetre of bookshelf space, then one CD can contain the equivalent of seven metres of bookshelf. However, textual data can be compressed by more than a factor of ten, using compression algorithms, so a CD-ROM can accommodate close to 100 metres of bookshelf space.In comparison a single layer DVD contains 4.4 GiB of data, approximately 6 times the amount of a CD-ROM.
| Type | Sectors | Data max size | Audio max size | Time | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (MB) | (MiB) | (MB) | (MiB) | (min) | ||
| 8 cm | 94,500 | 193.536 | ≈ 184.6 | 222.264 | ≈ 212.0 | 21 |
| 283,500 | 580.608 | ≈ 553.7 | 666.792 | ≈ 635.9 | 63 | |
| 650 MB | 333,000 | 681.984 | ≈ 650.3 | 783.216 | ≈ 746.9 | 74 |
| 700 MB | 360,000 | 737.280 | ≈ 703.1 | 846.720 | ≈ 807.4 | 80 |
| 800 MB | 405,000 | 829.440 | ≈ 791.0 | 952.560 | ≈ 908.4 | 90 |
| 900 MB | 445,500 | 912.384 | ≈ 870.1 | 1,047.816 | ≈ 999.3 | 99 |
| Note: Megabyte (MB) and minute (min) values are exact. |
CD capacities are always given in binary units, although decimal SI prefixes are usually used: a "700 MB" CD has a nominal capacity of about 700 MiB. DVD capacities, on the other hand, are given in decimal units: a "4.7 GB" DVD has a nominal capacity of about 4.38 GiB.
CD-ROM drives
- Further information: Optical disc drive
CD-ROM discs are read using CD-ROM drives, which are now almost universal on personal computers. A CD-ROM drive may be connected to the computer via an IDE (ATA), SCSI, S-ATA, Firewire, or USB interface or a proprietary interface, such as the Panasonic CD interface. Virtually all modern CD-ROM drives can also play audio CDs as well as Video CDs and other data standards when used in conjunction with the right software.
Transfer rates
The rate at which CD-ROM drives can transfer data from the disc is gauged by a speed factor relative to music CDs: 1x or 1-speed which gives a data transfer rate of 150 kilobytes per second in the most common data format. By increasing the speed at which the disc is spun, data can be transferred at greater rates. For example, a CD-ROM drive that can read at 8x speed spins the disc at up to 4000 rpm (compared to the 500 rpm maximum for 1x speed), giving a transfer rate of 1.2 megabytes per second. Above 12x speed, vibration and heat can become a problem. CD-ROM drives above this speed tackle the problem in several ways. Constant angular velocity (CAV) drives spin the disc at a constant rate, leading to faster data transfer when reading from the outer parts of the disc, but slower towards the centre. 20x was thought to be the maximum speed due to mechanical constraints until Samsung Electronics introduced the SCR-3230, a 32x CD-ROM drive which uses a ball bearing system to balance the spinning disc in the drive to reduce vibration and noise. As of 2004, the fastest transfer rate commonly available is about 52x or 10,350 rpm and 7.62 megabytes per second, though this is only when reading information from the outer parts of a disc. Future speed increases based simply upon spinning the disc faster are particularly limited by the strength of polycarbonate plastic used in CD manufacturing, though improvements can still be obtained by the use of multiple laser pickups as demonstrated by the Kenwood TrueX 72x which uses seven laser beams and a rotation speed of approximately 10x.CD-Recordable drives are often sold with three different speed ratings, one speed for write-once operations, one for re-write operations, and one for read-only operations. The speeds are typically listed in that order; ie a 12x/10x/32x CD drive can, CPU and media permitting, write to CD-R disks at 12x speed (1.76 megabytes/s), write to CD-RW discs at 10x speed (1.46 megabytes/s), and read from CD discs at 32x speed (4.69 megabytes/s).
The 1x speed rating for CDs (150 kilobytes/s) is not to be confused with the 1x speed rating for DVDs (1.32 megabytes/s).
Common transfer speeds:
| Transfer Speed | Megabytes/s | Megabits/s | Mebibits/s |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1x | 0.15 | 1.2 | 1.1444 |
| 2x | 0.3 | 2.4 | 2.2888 |
| 4x | 0.6 | 4.8 | 4.5776 |
| 8x | 1.2 | 9.6 | 9.1553 |
| 10x | 1.5 | 12.0 | 11.4441 |
| 12x | 1.8 | 14.4 | 13.7329 |
| 20x | 3.0 | 24.0 | 22.8882 |
| 32x | 4.8 | 38.4 | 36.6211 |
| 36x | 5.4 | 43.2 | 41.1987 |
| 40x | 6.0 | 48.0 | 45.7764 |
| 48x | 7.2 | 57.6 | 54.9316 |
| 50x | 7.5 | 60.0 | 57.2205 |
| 52x | 7.8 | 62.4 | 59.5093 |
Copyright issues
There has been a move by the recording industry to make audio CDs (CDDAs, Red Book CDs) unplayable on computer CD-ROM drives, to prevent the copying of music. This is done by intentionally introducing errors onto the disc that the embedded circuits on most stand-alone audio players can automatically compensate for, but which may confuse CD-ROM drives. Consumer rights advocates are as of October 2001 pushing to require warning labels on compact discs that do not conform to the official Compact Disc Digital Audio standard (often called the Red Book) to inform consumers of which discs do not permit full fair use of their content.
In 2005, Sony BMG Music Entertainment were criticised when a copy protection mechanism known as Extended Copy Protection (XCP) used on some of their audio CDs automatically and surreptitiously installed copy-prevention software on computers (see 2005 Sony BMG CD copy protection scandal). Such discs are not legally allowed to be called CDs or Compact Discs because they break the Red Book standard governing CDs, and Amazon.com for example describes them as "copy protected discs" rather than "compact discs" or "CDs".
Software distributors, and in particular distributors of computer games, often make use of various copy protection schemes to prevent software running from any media besides the original CD-ROMs. This differs somewhat from audio CD protection in that it is usually implemented in both the media and the software itself. The CD-ROM itself may contain "weak" sectors to make copying the disc more difficult, and additional data that may be difficult or impossible to copy to a CD-R or disc image, but which the software checks for each time it is run to ensure an original disc and not an unauthorized copy is present in the computer's CD-ROM drive.
Manufacturers of CD writers (CD-R or CD-RW) are encouraged by the music industry to ensure that every drive they produce has a unique identifier, which will be encoded by the drive on every disc that it records: the RID or Recorder Identification Code. This is a counterpart to the SID — the Source Identification Code, an eight character code beginning with "IFPI" that is usually stamped on discs produced by CD recording plants.
See also
- Red Book (audio CD standard)
- DVD-Audio
- Computer hardware
- Phase-change Dual
- DVD-ROM
- CD/DVD authoring
- CD shattering
- MultiLevel Recording, an obsolete technology (with non-binary modulation)
References
This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.Further reading
- Stability Comparison of Recordable Optical Discs - A study of error rates in harsh conditions.
- Care, Handling and Storage of Removeable Media.
External links
- How CDs Work from HowStuffWorks.com
- Andy McFadden's CD-Recordable FAQ
- Understanding CD-R & CD-RW by Hugh Bennett
- em>Inside a CD-ROM drive from The PC Doctor
- Comparative perspective on CD data transfer rates. Database for examination.
optical disc authoring, including DVD authoring, known often as burning, is the process of recording source material—video, audio or other data—onto an optical disc (compact disc or DVD).
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optical disc is a flat, circular, usually polycarbonate disc where data is stored in the form of pits (or bumps) within a flat surface, usually along a single spiral groove that covers the entire recorded surface of the disc.
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disk image is a computer file containing the complete contents and structure of a data storage medium or device, such as a Hard drive, CD or DVD. The term has been generalized to cover any such file, whether originated from an actual physical storage device or not.
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optical disk drive (ODD) is a disk drive that uses electromagnetic waves as part of the process of reading and writing data. It is a computer's peripheral device, that stores data on optical discs.
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Optical disc authoring software is computer software for authoring optical discs including CD-ROMs and DVDs. They are also known by synonyms such as CD burning application or DVD authoring software. Such software is required to use an optical disc recorder.
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Disc At Once, Track At Once, Session at Once (i.e. multiple burning sessions for one disc), or packet writing modes. Each mode serves different purposes:
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- Disc At Once: writes the entire disc in one pass; preferred for duplication masters
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Disc-At-Once, Track-At-Once, and Session-At-Once.
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CD Disc-At-Once
Disc-At-Once or DAO for CD-R media is a mode that masters the disc contents in one pass, rather than a track at a time as in Track At Once...... Click the link for more information.
Packet writing is an optical disc recording technology used to allow writeable CD and DVD media to be used in a similar manner to a floppy disk. Packet writing allows the user to access the contents of a CD-R or CD-RW disc directly through a mounted filesystem (Unix, Linux, Mac OS
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Laserdisc
Laserdisc (left) compared to a DVD (right).
Media type: Optical disc
Encoding: Various
Developed by: MCA
Usage: Video storage
Optical disc authoring
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Laserdisc (left) compared to a DVD (right).
Media type: Optical disc
Encoding: Various
Developed by: MCA
Usage: Video storage
Optical disc authoring
- Optical disc
- Optical disc image
- Recorder hardware
- Authoring software
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Compact Disc
The closely spaced tracks on the readable surface of a Compact Disc cause light to diffract into a full visible colour spectrum
Media type: Optical disc
Encoding: Various
Capacity: Typically up to 700 MB
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The closely spaced tracks on the readable surface of a Compact Disc cause light to diffract into a full visible colour spectrum
Media type: Optical disc
Encoding: Various
Capacity: Typically up to 700 MB
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CD-R (Compact Disc-Recordable) is a variation of the Compact Disc invented by Philips and Sony. CD-R is a Write Once, Read Many optical medium (though the whole disk does not have to be entirely written in the same session) and retains a high level of
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Compact Disc ReWritable (CD-RW) is a rewritable optical disc format. Known as CD-Erasable (CD-E) during its development, CD-RW was introduced in 1997, and was preceded by the never officially released CD-MO in 1988.
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MiniDisc
The Sony MZ1 MiniDisc player, the first to hit the market in 1992.
Media type: Magneto-optical disc
Encoding: ATRAC, linear PCM (with Hi-MD)
Capacity: 80 min (standard MiniDisc), up to 45 hours of audio (1 GB capacity) (with Hi-MD)
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The Sony MZ1 MiniDisc player, the first to hit the market in 1992.
Media type: Magneto-optical disc
Encoding: ATRAC, linear PCM (with Hi-MD)
Capacity: 80 min (standard MiniDisc), up to 45 hours of audio (1 GB capacity) (with Hi-MD)
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DVD
Media type: Optical disc
Capacity: 4.7 GB (single layer), 8.5 GB (dual layer)
Usage: Data storage, audio, video, games
Optical disc authoring
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Media type: Optical disc
Capacity: 4.7 GB (single layer), 8.5 GB (dual layer)
Usage: Data storage, audio, video, games
Optical disc authoring
- Optical disc
- Optical disc image
- Recorder hardware
- Authoring software
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DVD-R is a DVD recordable format. A DVD-R has a larger storage capacity than its optical predecessor, the 700 MB CD-R, typically storing 4.71 GB (or 4.382 GiB), although the capacity of the original standard developed by Pioneer was 3.95 GB (3.68 GiB).
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DVD-D is a self-destructing disposable DVD format. Like the EZ-D, it is sold in a cardboard sleeve, and begins to destroy itself after several hours.
DVD-D now exists as one time play only for movies, limited time play for video games, and recordable DVD-D.
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DVD-D now exists as one time play only for movies, limited time play for video games, and recordable DVD-D.
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DVD-R DL (DL stands for Dual Layer), also called DVD-R9, is a derivative of the DVD-R format standard. DVD-R DL discs employ two recordable dye layers, each capable of storing nearly the 4.7 GB (4.
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DVD+R is a once-writable optical disc with 4.7 GB (4.377 GiB) of storage capacity (more precisely, 2295104 sectors of 2048 bytes each). It has slightly less storage capacity than the DVD-R (4.382 GiB).
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DVD+R DL (DL stands for Dual Layer, commonly mistaken as Double Layer), also called DVD+R9, is a derivative of the DVD+R format created by the DVD+RW Alliance. Its use was first demonstrated in October 2003.
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DVD-RW disc ("DVD dash RW", sometimes nicknamed "DVD minus RW") is a rewritable optical disc with equal storage capacity to a DVD-R, typically 4.7 GB. The format was developed by Pioneer in November 1999 and has been approved by the DVD Forum.
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DVD+RW is the name of a standard for optical discs: one of several types of DVD, which hold up to about 4.7GB per disc (interpreted as approximately 4.7 × 109 bytes; actually 2295104 sectors of 2048 bytes each) and are used for storing films, music or other data.
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DVD-RW DL is a rewritable optical disc standard with storage capacity of 8.5 GB. DVD-RW DL discs employ two rewritable dye layers. It's approved by DVD Forum as "DVD Specifications for Re-recordable Disc for Dual Layer (DVD-RW for DL) Physical Specifications, Version 2.0".
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DVD+RW DL is a rewritable optical disc with storage capacity of 8.5 GB. DVD+RW DL discs employ two rewritable dye layers.
In March 2006, the DVD+RW Alliance approved DVD+RW part 2: Dual Layer, volume 1; DVD+RW 8.5 Gbytes, Basic Format Specifications, version 1.
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In March 2006, the DVD+RW Alliance approved DVD+RW part 2: Dual Layer, volume 1; DVD+RW 8.5 Gbytes, Basic Format Specifications, version 1.
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DVD-RAM (DVD–Random Access Memory) is a disc specification presented in 1996 by the DVD Forum, which specifies rewritable DVD-RAM media and the appropriate DVD writers. DVD-RAM media have been used in computers as well as camcorders and personal video recorders since 1998.
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Blu-ray Disc
Media type: High-density optical disc
Encoding: MPEG-2, MPEG-4 AVC (H.264), and VC-1
Capacity: 25 GB (single layer), 50 GB (dual layer)
Read mechanism: 1x@36 Mbit/s & 2x@72 Mbit/s
Developed by: Blu-ray Disc Association
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Media type: High-density optical disc
Encoding: MPEG-2, MPEG-4 AVC (H.264), and VC-1
Capacity: 25 GB (single layer), 50 GB (dual layer)
Read mechanism: 1x@36 Mbit/s & 2x@72 Mbit/s
Developed by: Blu-ray Disc Association
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Blu-ray Disc recordable refers to two optical disc formats that can be recorded with an optical disc recorder. BD-R discs can be written to once, whereas BD-RE can be erased and re-recorded multiple times.
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HD DVD
Media type: High-density optical disc
Encoding: VC-1, H.264, and MPEG-2
Capacity: 15 GB (single layer) 30 GB (dual layer)
Read mechanism: 1x@36 Mbit/s & 2x@72 Mbit/s
Developed by: DVD Forum
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Media type: High-density optical disc
Encoding: VC-1, H.264, and MPEG-2
Capacity: 15 GB (single layer) 30 GB (dual layer)
Read mechanism: 1x@36 Mbit/s & 2x@72 Mbit/s
Developed by: DVD Forum
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HD DVD-R is the writable disc variant of HD DVD, and is available with a single-layer capacity of 15 GB or dual-layer capacity of 30 GB.[1] Currently, HD DVD-R has slower write speeds than the competing BD-R format (1–2x vs.
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This article contains information about a scheduled or expected .
It may contain preliminary information that does not reflect the final version of the product.
HD DVD-RAM
Media type: High-density optical disc
Capacity: 20 GB
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It may contain preliminary information that does not reflect the final version of the product.
HD DVD-RAM
Media type: High-density optical disc
Capacity: 20 GB
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Ultra Density Optical (UDO) is an optical disc format designed for high-density storage of high-definition video and data.
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Overview
An Ultra Density Optical disc or UDO is a 5.25" ISO cartridge optical disc which can store up to 60 GB of data...... Click the link for more information.
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