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DVDs Canada:
DVD Glossary?
- 8-to-16
- Eight-to-sixteen modulation used to convert eight data
bits to sixteen channel bits prior to recording.
- ADPCM
- Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation compression
technique that encodes only the difference between sequential
samples.
- ATime
- Address information contained in a block identifying
a unique block location for receiving systems in absolute
elapsed time measured in minutes, seconds, and blocks
referenced to the beginning of the program area.
- ATIP
- Absolute Time In Pregroove similar
to ATime but used by a writer for unrecorded disc addressing.
- Astigmatism
- Distorted spot resulting from imperfect focus caused
by a defect of an optical system.
- Authoring
- The process of designing, creating, capturing, editing,
and integrating information for a CD or DVD. Or, creating
a database for a CD or DVD using tagging and indexing
that generates a search and retrieval document.
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- Birefringence
- Optical distortion caused by different indices of refraction
for separate directions of polarization, often caused
by stress in the optical medium. Produced during CD or
DVD injection molding by shrinkage, flow lines, and inclusions
in the substrate. Usually more severe near the outer
diameter.
- Bit
- One binary information element having the value ZERO
or ONE.
- Bit Error Rate (BER)
- Probability that a read bit does not match the written
bit.
- Block
- Group of contiguous recorded characters treated as
a unit and containing one or more logical records. A
logical block contains 512x28 bytes, where
n is an integer (0, 1, 2, ...) Normally used to characterize
a DVD ECC block or a CD subcode block, or section, but
can also refer to a CD frame.
- Block Error Rate (BLER)
- Number of blocks, each containing one or more erroneous
bits, per unit of time (usually seconds).
- Blue Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (blue cover)
for Enhanced Music CD.
- Bump
- Exposed area on the master viewed from the entrance
surface. Also used to designate indentations caused by
foreign matter during molding.
- Burst
- Contiguous error groups usually caused by a large tangential
physical defect. ISO burst limit for CD is less than
seven successive frames, each containing two or more
successive error bytes.
- Burst Cutting Area (BCA)
- Optional annular area on a DVD disc near lead-in containing
low reflectance radial stripes of encoded content provider
information.
- Byte
- Contiguous set of eight data bits, represented by an
equal or greater number of channel or recorded bits.
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- CAV
- Constant Angular Velocity of
the information track resulting in variable, radius-dependent
bit rates.
- CD-Bridge
- Combined features of CD-ROM XA and CD-i, playable in
CD-i player or CD-ROM XA drive.
- CD-DA
- CD-Digital Audio using 16 bits
of linear coding to represent each digital sample of
an audio channel. First specified in the Red Book, later
in IEC 908 (also see Digitize.)
- CD Extra
- See Enhanced Music CD.
- CD-i
- Compact Disc Interactive specified
by Green Book, designed as a TV adjunct featuring simultaneous
integration of various levels of sound, audio, animation,
graphics, and limited video. Used for multimedia and
interactive software.
- CD-i Ready
- CD-Audio disc with additional features such as graphics
information that can be accessed in a CD-i player. CD-i
information hidden in a long, 3 minute or more, track
#1 index 0 pre-gap that is skipped by CD-DA players.
- CD+G
- Format adding graphics to CD-DA in reserved subcode
bits R-W (6 bits per frame, 20 MB per disc). Primarily
used for Karaoke.
- CD-R
- CD-Recordable, write once-read many disc
specified by Orange Book Part II using a pre-stamped,
wobbled groove to guide a write laser that irreversibly
changes regions of a dye polymer layer to an optically
absorbing state. A special drive is required for writing.
- CD-ROM
- CD-Read Only Memory, first
specified in the Yellow Book, later in ISO/IEC 10149
(Second Edition 1995).
- CD-ROM XA
- CD-ROM eXtended Architecture standard
of Philips/Sony that incorporates a subheader to support
interleaving of audio, graphics, video and computer data
using CD- ROM XA Mode 2/Form 1 and CD-ROM XA Mode 2/Form
2 sectors. CD-ROM XA EDC and ECC structures differ from
those of CD-ROM Mode 2.
- CD-RW
- CD-ReWritable phase change media
specified by Orange Book Part III that can be reversibly
recorded, erased, or overwritten. Uses a pre-stamped
groove to guide a write laser. Data is contained in an
alloy layer that can be converted by a laser from a reflective
crystalline state to a non-reflective amorphous state
or erased back to the crystalline state, depending on
laser power. A special drive is required for writing,
but CD-RW recorded media can be read in modified CD-ROM
drives capable of detecting the low light levels resulting
from CD-RW reflectivity of 15-25%. (Formerly CD- Erasable
or CD-E.)
- Channel Bit
- Binary elements by which ZERO and ONE data bits are
represented by optical information on the disc after
encoding and modulation. Multiple (usually 14 or 16)
channel bits are commonly used to represent one eight
bit data byte to achieve higher information density when
combined with NRZ-I coding.
- CIRC
- Cross Interleave Reed-Solomon Code is
a method of error detection and correction employing
Reed-Solomon parity bytes together with different interleaving,
or delay, patterns that assists in error correction by
distributing concentrated read errors over multiple frames
that then form the input to a CIRC decoder.
- Circular Polarization
- Two linearly polarized, orthogonal (right angle) light
beams that are 90 degrees out of phase. Produced from
unpolarized light by a linear polarizer aligned 45 degrees
from a major axis of a quarter wave plate.
- Clamping Area
- Region between the center hole and information area
where the disc is physically connected to the drive spindle.
- CLV
- Constant Linear Velocity of
the information track achieved by variable angular velocity
using higher rotational drive speeds on the inner tracks
and lower speeds on the outer tracks resulting in a constant
scanning velocity and bit rate.
- Closure
- See finalization.
- Coherent Light
- Illumination in which phasor amplitudes at all object
points vary in unison, such as light from a point source
or a laser.
- Color
- Response of the eye to different wavelengths of light.
Ultraviolet < 400 nm, violet 400-424 nm, blue 424-491
nm, green 491-575 nm, yellow 575-585 nm, orange 585-647
nm, red 647-700 nm, infrared > 700 nm. Maximum visibility
occurs at 556 nm.
- Compression
- Decreasing the size of stored information by reducing
the representation of the information without significantly
diminishing the information itself, usually by removing
redundancies. Requires decompression upon retrieval.
Lossless compression allows the original data to be recreated
exactly. Lossy compression sacrifices some accuracy to
achieve greater compression.
- Control Byte
- See subcode.
- Conversion
- Data transfer from one type of media to anotherþ often
using DLT or 8 mm tape or CD-R as input.
- Crosstalk
- Unwanted signal from adjacent tracks.
- Cutting Master Format (CMF)
- Specification for storing copyright protection and
other information, such as Disc Description Protocol
(DDP), that is required for full DVD mastering.
- Cyclic Redundancy Check Code (CRCC or CRC)
- Type of error detection code (see EDC).
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- Data Area
- Logical sectors in a volume containing descriptors,
path tables, and files.
- Data Bit
- Information received from the host for storage or transmitted
to the host after retrieval.
- Data Field
- A fixed length field containing the user information
in a sector.
- Decibel (dB)
- Unit of measurement using a logarithmic scale to represent
ratios of two values, A and B, calculated as log10(A/B).
- Defect Management
- Replacement of unusable regions of media with either
a subsequent block or a block in a separate spare area.
Normally used for rewritable discs.
- Deflection
- Vertical, or axial, displacement error of a disc measured
from a flat reference plane.
- Descriptor
- Structure that contains information describing a volume
or file.
- Deviation
- Angular displacement error of a disc measured from
the normal to a flat reference plane, also referred to
as tilt.
- Differential Phase
- Use of phase, or time, differences instead of amplitude
differences to provide a servo error signal.
- Diffraction
- Departure from perfect sharpness of the shadow edge
of an illuminated object. Limits the minimum size of
a focussed spot. See Huygens' principle.
- Digital Sum Value (DSV)
- Representation of the low frequency or DC component
of a binary bit stream. The value +1 is assigned to a
binary NRZ-I ONE and the value -1 is assigned to a binary
NRZ-I ZERO. A cumulative sum of values is maintained
for successive NRZ-I bits that may be used to select
appropriate merging or channel bit patterns.
- Digitize
- Conversion of a sampled analog or continuous signal
into a series of binary ones and zeros. Used for audio,
graphic images, or physical measurements. Sampling frequency
and number of binary elements affects accuracy of conversion
back to analog form.
- Directory
- A file in a single extent belonging to only one directory
hierarchy that contains contiguous records, each of which
describe a file section or another directory.
- Directory Hierarchy
- One set of path tables and a multilevel set of directories
defined by a volume descriptor and having a common character
set and other properties.
- Dropout
- Significant loss of signal amplitude capable of affecting
data and servo accuracy, usually related to a physical
defect.
- Duplication
- Production of a copy using sequential, serial transfer
of information elements from an original image to a duplicate.
Low mastering and equipment costs and short preparation
times are offset by low throughput, often limiting use
to low volumes. Examples would be CD-R duplication from
a digital master, or making copies of text using a line
printer.
- DVD
- 120 mm optical disc achieving higher data density through
use of 650/635 nm lasers and, optionally, multiple information
surfaces and/or layers.
- Dye Polymer
- Organic chemical that changes reflectivity when exposed
to intense light of a particular wavelength.
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- Eccentricity
- Variation in radius of an information track from the
true axis of rotation of the disc. May be confused with
runout.
- ECC
- Mathematically determined Error Correction Code specified
in the standards that represents data and is recorded
with that data to enable limited correction of read errors.
- ECMA
- European Computer Manufacturers Association,
a regional member of ISO headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland
that often initiates and issues standards that are precursors
of subsequent ISO standards.
- EDC
- Mathematically determined Error Detection Code specified
in the standards that represents data and is recorded
with that data to support limited identification of read
errors.
- Effect Length
- Electrical or optical length in the direction of an
information track of a physical data feature such as
a pit or land.
- EFM
- Eight-to-Fourteen Modulation used
to convert eight data bits to fourteen channel bits prior
to recording.
- El Torito
- Bootable CD specification named for the restaurant
where it was initiated.
- Enhanced Music CD
- Multisession CD-DA and CD-ROM disc specified in Blue
Book playable as an audio CD without data-generated static.
- Entrance Surface (Readout Surface)
- Substrate surface nearest to the optical pickup head
where the laser beam enters and, after reflection, exits.
- Erasure Byte
- Byte containing one or more erroneous bits flagged
by error detection for processing in a subsequent operation.
- Error Byte
- Byte of unknown location containing one or more erroneous
bits.
- Extent
- Set of logical blocks having addressing numbers that
form a continuous ascending sequence.
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- F1-Frame
- Group of 24 8-bit bytes after scrambling and before
CIRC encoding during a write operation. Alternatively,
after CIRC decoding and before de-scrambling during read.
- F2-Frame
- Group of 32 8-bit bytes after scrambling and after
CIRC encoding during a write operation. Alternatively,
before CIRC decoding and de-scrambling during read.
- F3-frame
- Group of 33 8-bit bytes consisting of the F2-frame
plus 8 subcode bits.
- Father
- The first electroformed part made from a glass master
and containing a reversed data image of the final disc.
- File
- Named collection of information stored in one or more
extents.
- File Section
- Part of the file that is stored in any one extent and
identified by a descriptor in a directory.
- Finalization
- Action in which lead-in and lead-out areas are recorded
that must be performed at the end of a recording operation
if the disc is to be readable in a conventional drive.
Also referred to as closure.
- Flag
- Bits appended to information that are used to indicate
the status of that information.
- Form 1
- CD-ROM XA Mode 2 sector containing three levels of
error correction for reliable retrieval of error- sensitive
data.
- Form 2
- CD-ROM XA Mode 2 sector containing two levels of error
correction for information tolerant of uncorrectable
errors.
- Format
- Structure used to organize data for information storage
and retrieval.
- Frame
- Information group containing data bytes along with
other information such as sync, address, and parity bytes
for error correction and detection.
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- Galois Field
- Mathematical concept where the elements of the binary
field GF(2m) are represented by 2m m-bit
binary bytes, each expressible by an m-bit column vector.
For example, GF(28) contains 256 eight-bit
bytes. Named for the brilliant French mathematician Evariste
Galois who developed the concept in the early 1830's.
Killed in a duel at the age of 25, his work was unknown
until Liouville published Galois' papers in 1846.
- GB
- Gigabyte, 1 GB equals 230 bytes or 1024
megabytes. Or, 1 GB may equal 109 bytes. Gb
may denote gigabits.
- Glass Master
- Data image of the final CD or DVD disc generated by
a Laser Beam Recorder (LBR), normally consisting of a
thin photosensitive organic layer supported by a polished,
optically flat glass substrate.
- Green Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (green cover)
for CD-i.
- Groove
- Continuous, spiraled trench-like radial guidance track
of a recordable or rewritable disc offset towards the
entrance surface that defines track centerline for recording
purposes and contains CLV clocking, addressing, and other
information.
- Header
- Area appended to and preceding user data containing
addressing, format, and other information.
- HF
- Analog signals containing High Frequency data
information in contrast to low frequency servo information.
- HFS
- Hierarchical File Structure defining
the native Apple MacIntosh format for mass storage.
- High Sierra
- Draft version of ISO 9660 (MS-DOS) standard for volume
and file structure. Named for the Lake Tahoe, California
hotel that hosted the conference resulting in the draft
standard.
- Holography
- Recording of both amplitude and phase information of
an object using interference between an object wave and
a coherent reference wave, both incident on a photo sensitive
medium. Coherent illumination of this medium, upon wavefront
reconstruction, results in an image having both amplitude
and phase characteristics of the original, resulting
in three dimensional and other special properties.
- Huygens' Principal
- Qualitative explanation of diffraction stating that
the propagation of a light wave can be predicted by assuming
that each point of the wave front acts as the source
of a secondary wave that spreads out in all directions.
The envelope of all the secondary waves is the new wave
front. Precisely defined by the Fresnel-Kirchhoff
formula.
- Hybrid
- Disc containing both an ISO 9660 (MS-DOS) partition
and an HFS partition. Or, a disc containing both ISO
9660 and UDF volume and file structures. Or, may indicate
that the first session of a multi- session CD-R or CD-RW
disc is a mastered session followed by recorded sessions.
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- Image
- Fully premastered data assembled in the exact format
for recording.
- Incremental
- Recording method allowing subsequent append or overwrite
operations without reformatting or loss of adjacent pre-recorded
information.
- Index
- Searchable points within a CD track, up to 99 index
points per track.
- Indexing
- Creation of a data index to speed up search and retrieval.
- Indirection
- Method whereby fixed virtual addresses are mapped into
variable logical locations.
- Information Area
- One area of a physical track consisting of one lead-in
(with TOC), one program area, and one lead- out.
- Information Layer
- Physical layer of a CD or DVD disc that contains optically
recoverable data after replication or recording.
- Injection Molding
- Replication involving injection under pressure of molten
plastic into the cavity of a mold followed by cooling
and removal of the solidified part that retains a replica
of the mold.
- Interchange
- Capability of media to function properly in various
systems.
- Interleaving
- A physical process rendering data more immune to burst
errors whereby bytes from one input group are assigned
to multiple output groups upon recording using a precisely
defined method. De-interleaving during reading reverses
the interleaving process, assembling data while dispersing
read errors (also see CIRC.)
- Or, a logical process of recording multiple files whereby
each file is divided into extents, each containing a
fixed number of blocks, that are recorded in a predetermined
pattern having a fixed spacing between extents, and are
alternated with extents of other files. Padding extents
may be utilized if files are not of the same size.
- Intersymbol Interference
- Unwanted signal from adjacent information on the same
track.
- ISO
- International Organization for Standardization comprised
of national and regional member bodies and headquartered
in Geneva, Switzerland. This non-governmental organization
was established in 1947, and selected ISO from
the Greek isos meaning equal, as in isothermal.
- ISO 9660
- International standard defining logical volume and
file structure requirements for CD-ROM.
- ISO/IEC 10149
- International standard defining data interchange requirements
for CD-ROM.
- ISO/IEC 16448
- International standard defining data interchange requirements
for DVD-ROM.
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- Jitter
- Variation in the time position of a read data event
from the expected position.
- kB
- Kilobyte, 1 kB equals 210 or 1024 bytes.
Or, 1 kB may equal 103 bytes. kb may be used
to denote kilobits.
- Label
- Printed information on the surface opposite to the
entrance surface. Note that the label side of a CD contains
metallized pits and grooves, and usually employs a protective
coating under the printed information.
- Lacquer Splash
- Dried protective coating material on the entrance surface
or outer rim.
- Land
- Unrecorded optical surface area between pits, grooves,
or marks, further away from the entrance surface than
pits.
- Laser
- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission
of Radiation generates monochromatic, coherent
light, usually from an excited gas or semiconductor.
- Laser Beam Recorder (LBR)
- Recording apparatus consisting of a gas laser that
is intensity modulated by a data encoder and position
controlled radially by an accurate lathe mechanism. The
laser beam is incident upon a glass master rotated by
a spindle motor having accurate speed control.
- Lead-In
- Area at the beginning of a disc or session containing
the Table of Contents (TOC) and other important information.
Lead-in is followed by the Program Area.
- Lead-Out
- Buffer area following the Program Area used in case
the player reads past the track.
- Length Deviation
- Variation of effect length from a norm.
- Linear Velocity
- Linear speed at which a moving feature passes a fixed
point (also see Scanning Velocity.)
- Link Block
- Identified or unidentified region containing errors
at the boundary of two different incrementally recorded
data regions.
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- Mark
- Low reflectance feature of a recording layer representing
data that can be sensed by an optical system.
- Master
- Physical entity containing an image for duplication
or replication (also see Glass Master.)
- Mastering
- The process of recording pre-mastered data on a master.
The data source is sometimes referred to as a gold master.
- MB
- Megabyte, 1 MB equals 220 bytes or 1024
kB. Or, 1 MB may equal 106 bytes. Mb may denote
megabits.
- Micrometer (µm)
- One millionth of one meter or 39.4 microinches.
- Microsecond (µs)
- One millionth of one second.
- Millimeter (mm)
- One thousandth of one meter or 0.0394 inches.
- Millisecond (ms)
- One thousandth of one second.
- Miscorrect
- Parity operation that incorrectly replaces valid data
with erroneous data.
- Misdetect
- Parity operation that fails to detect erroneous data.
- Mixed Mode
- CD-ROM and CD-DA on the same disc, data on track 1,
audio on tracks 2 up to 99.
- Mode 1
- CD-ROM format containing three levels of error correction
for reliable retrieval of error-sensitive computer data.
- Mode 2
- CD-ROM format containing two levels of error correction
for uncompressed audio, video, and other types of information
tolerant of sporadic uncorrectable errors. Should not
be confused with CD-ROM XA Mode 2 (see Form 1 and Form
2.)
- Modulation
- Conversion of data bits to channel bits that normally
enhances storage capacity and minimizes low frequency
components of recorded information that might interfere
with servomechanism functions.
- Monochromatic Light
- Illumination containing a single wavelength.
- Mother
- The electroformed part made from a father and containing
a data image of the final disc.
- MPEG
- Motion Pictures Expert Group compression
methods for video, graphics, or audio information.
- MSCDEX
- MicroSoft CD-ROM EXtension enabling
computers using MS-DOS 3.1 or higher to access a CD-ROM
as a large, read-only hard drive.
- Multimedia
- Integration of more than one form of information, such
as text, graphics, audio, video, animation, and computer
data.
- Multisession
- Multiple incremental recording events, or sessions,
using non-incremental session-at-once or incremental
track-at-once writing, each recording event resulting
in a new lead-in (with TOC), program area, and lead-out.
Multiple recording events at different times result in
multiple sessions with a distinct TOC for each session.
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- Nanometer (nm)
- One thousandth of one micrometer or 0.0394 microinches.
Equivalent to 10 Angstroms (Å).
- Non-Return-to-Zero (NRZ)
- Bi-level digital code in which one level represents
a binary ONE and the other level represents a binary
ZERO.
- Non-Return-to-Zero-Inverted (NRZ-I)
- Bi-level digital code in which the levels are changed
by a binary NRZ ONE and remain unchanged by an NRZ ZERO.
- NPR
- Non-Photoresist Mastering method
using a Laser Beam Recorder that employs an ablative
process to write onto a dye layer supported by a polished,
optically flat glass substrate.
- NTSC
- National Television Systems Committee organized
by the Electronic Industries Association for the
development of NTSC commercial television standards used
in the United States and also Canada, Japan, and other
countries. Black-and-white TV uses a scanning system
of 525 lines at 60 fields per second. Color uses 525
lines at 59.94 fields per second with a 3.58 MHz color
subcarrier.
- Numerical Aperture (NA)
- Resolution or "spot" size of a lens. A small spot is
produced by a lens having a high numerical aperture achieved
using a large physical aperture and/or a short focal
length. NA is equal to one-half of the reciprocal of
the f-stop.
- Oil Stain
- Organic residues under the metallic coating
- One Off
- A finalized CD-R. May also refer to a CD-R proof, or
test, disc generated after premastering.
- Orange Book
- Proprietary multipart Philips/Sony specification (orange
cover) for magneto-optical, CD-R, and CD- RW optical
discs.
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- Packet
- Integral number of sectors forming a single unit of
information that can be incrementally written or overwritten.
- PAL
- Phase Alternate Line video
standard used in Europe and other parts of the world
for composite color encoding, using 625 lines at 50 fields
per second with a 4.438 MHz color subcarrier, although
other scanning systems may be used.
- Parity
- Mathematical representation of data used for error
detection or correction.
- Partition
- An extent of logical sectors within a volume; partitions
may be allowed to overlap.
- Path Table
- A file in a single extent belonging to one directory
hierarchy that contains contiguous records that fully
describe the directory hierarchy.
- PCA
- Power Calibration Area of
a recordable or rewritable disc that precedes lead-in
and the PMA, where the optimum laser power level for
writing can be determined by a recording drive.
- Phase Change
- State change of a recording layer caused by introduction
of energy, resulting in information storage detectable
by differences in optical properties of the physically
different states.
- Photo CD
- Proprietary Eastman Kodak method of storing photographs
on CD described in the Beige Book, using elements of
Yellow Book, Orange Book, and CD-ROM XA.
- Pit
- Information area viewed as a depression from the label
surface that can be sensed by an optical system.
- Pitch
- See Track Pitch.
- PMA
- Program Memory Area preceding
lead-in of a recordable or rewritable disc containing
a history of recorded track locations that are copied
to the TOC upon finalization of the session or disc.
- Polarization
- Direction of the electric vector of an electromagnetic
wave. Polarization is fixed for linear polarization or
is rotating at right angles to the direction of propagation
if circularly polarized.
- Post-Gap
- Two second area at the end of a CD program area or
Mode change, encoded as null data or audio silence.
- PQ Information
- Subcode information determining track start points,
control bits, timing, and other information.
- Pre-Gap
- Two second first part of a CD program area or track,
normally encoded as null data or audio silence, but should
contain track descriptor blocks if session-at-once or
incremental track-at-once recording is used.
- Pre-Groove
- See Groove.
- Premastering
- Generating an image ready for mastering and replicating
by formatting data into the exact sector, volume, and
file structure required by the applicable standard.
- Program Area
- Region in the information area of the disc containing
one or more logical tracks, each consisting of a pre-gap,
followed by user data, and ending in a post-gap.
- Protective Coating
- Layer applied over the metal coating. Often a spin-coated
UV-curable polymer.
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- RAW
- Real time Read-After-Write feature
of certain mastering techniques. Or, a transparent, unmetallized
disc.
- Raw Bit Error Rate
- Probability of a bit being erroneous without use of
any error correction techniques.
- Record
- A sequence of bytes treated as a unit of information.
- Recordable
- Storage medium that can only be read, not modified,
after information is initially written (also see WORM.)
- Red Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (red cover)
for CD-Audio, subsequently published as IEC 908.
- Reed-Solomon Code
- Byte-structured parity format that cycles data multiple
times through a mathematical transformation in order
to increase its effectiveness, often used with optical
and magnetic computer media for error detection and/or
correction. The algebraic code belongs to the class of
BCH (Bose-Chaudry-Hocquehen) multiple burst correcting
cyclic codes. Method published in 1960 by Irving S. Reed
and Gustave Solomon, staff members of MIT's Lincoln Laboratory.
- Reference Plane
- Plane normal to the axis of rotation of a disc defined
by the perfectly flat annular surface of an ideal spindle
onto which the CD or DVD clamping area is physically
connected.
- Reflectance (Reflectivity)
- Proportion of incident light that is returned from
a reflective surface.
- Relative Time (PTime)
- Elapsed time from the start of a logical track.
- Replication
- Production of a copy using simultaneous, parallel transfer
of all information elements from an original image to
a replica. High mastering and equipment costs and long
preparation times are offset by high throughput, making
the technique attractive for high volumes. Examples would
be CD-ROM replication from a stamper using molding, stamping,
or coining, or making copies of text by lithographic
means (also see Injection Molding.)
- Rewritable
- Storage medium that can be overwritten multiple times,
normally without pre-erasure.
- Rock Ridge
- IEEE standard for UNIX file structure, named for the
mythical town in the movie Blazing Saddles.
- RS-PC
- Reed-Solomon Product Code is
a method of error correction employing several (usually
two) groups of Reed-Solomon parity bytes computed from
rows, columns, or diagonals of a rectangular data array.
- Runout
- Radial variation of a non-data physical dimension (also
see Eccentricity.)
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- s
- One second of time.
- Sample
- Value of an analog or continuous signal at a single
point of time (see Digitize.)
- Scanning Velocity
- Linear velocity at which optical data features pass
a fixed point such as the pickup head of a drive.
- Scarlet Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (scarlet cover)
for a Super Audio disc of one DVD layer and one CD layer.
- Section
- CD information group containing 98 consecutive frames
of interleaved bytes from scrambled sectors, plus C1
and C2 CIRC, subcode, and frame sync. Also referred to
as a subcode block.
- Sector
- Smallest addressable entity in the information area
that can be addressed independently of other addressable
parts.
- Servomechanism
- Electromechanical means of automatically maintaining
a desired state by sensing variations from that state,
and then correcting those variations by using very small
amounts of power to control much larger amounts of power.
- Session
- Single recording event that creates a single information
area (lead-in - program area - lead-out.)
- Single Session
- Single recording event resulting in one lead-in (with
TOC), program area, and lead-out for the entire disc.
- Skew
- See deviation.
- Space
- High reflectance feature of a recording layer representing
data that can be sensed by an optical system.
- Spindle
- Mechanical means of coupling a disc to a rotating device.
- Stamper
- The electroformed part made from a mother and containing
a reversed data image of the final disc. Becomes part
of a mold for the injection molding replication process.
- Standard for Recording
- A document agreed upon by the originator and recipient
of a volume specifying the recording and addressing methods
for information, including;
- a unique physical address for each recorded sector,
and
- the location of the data field within each sector,
and
- the length of the data field within each sector.
- Subcode
- Ninety-eight-bit codes used in the CD format. P and
Q codes contain flag and control information. Codes R,S,T,U,V,W
are available and may be used for CD+G or other specialized
applications.
- Subcode Block
- See Section.
- Substrate
- Transparent physical layer providing mechanical support
through which the laser can access an information layer.
- Sync
- Unique bit pattern appended to and preceding information
that establishes a reference point for decoding of that
subsequent information.
- System Area
- The first sixteen logical sectors in a CD volume numbered
0 to 15.
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- Table of Contents (TOC)
- Lists number of CD tracks, their starting locations,
total length of data on the disc, and identification
of type of disc. The TOC is placed in Q-subcode in the
lead-in area of a CD disc.
- Tilt
- See deviation.
- Track
- A physical track consists of one contiguous physical
spiral area from inner diameter to outer diameter containing
information (dual layer DVD discs have two physical tracks.)
Or, the information contained within a single 360 ° rotation
of the disc. Or, one contiguous logical element of information,
such as a single CD audio track (a song) or computer
data region (an information track.) One CD session contains
from one up to 99 such logical tracks, each consisting
of a pre-gap, user data, and a post-gap.
- Track Pitch
- Center-to-center distance between two radially adjacent
information sequences.
- Transition
- Recorded information location at a pit-land juncture
in CD and DVD. Normally a channel bit ONE.
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- UDF
- Universal Disc Format standard
of the Optical Storage Technology Association designed
to create a practical subset of the ISO/IEC 13346 random-access
file system and volume structure format.
- Variable Bit Rate (VBR)
- Data compression technique that produces an output
data stream varying between fixed minimum and maximum
rates, with bandwidth decreasing or increasing depending
on the complexity of the fixed rate incoming data.
- Verification
- Process of matching information on a copy to that on
the original.
- VIDEO CD
- Special CD-Bridge implementation for MPEG-1 digital
videoþ specified in the White Book.
- Volume
- A dismountable CD-ROM disc. A mountable sector address
space consisting of a single set of sector addresses,
usually as a continuous sequence of sectors, and containing
one or more directory hierarchies.
- Volume Descriptor
- One sector containing information describing the volume.
If multiple volume descriptors are present, then the
volume descriptor set must be recorded in consecutively
numbered logical sectors.
- Volume Set
- A collection of one or more volumes with identical
volume set identification, on which a set of files is
recorded.
- Volume Space
- The set of all logical sectors on a volume encompassing
the system and data areas.
- White Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (white cover)
for VIDEO CD.
- Wobble
- Continuous, sinusoidal radial deviation of the prerecorded
groove from track centerline. Usually includes CLV and
other information, such as location, contained in phase
or other forms of modulation.
- Word
- Contiguous set of data bytes. Four CD-DA bytes representing
one stereo sample is often referred to as one word.
- WORM
- Write-Once-Read-Many recording
on non-erasable blank media or media containing pre-stamped
grooves to guide a write laser.
- Write Strategy
- Shaping recorder laser power as a function of time
and/or adjusting the write time duration to be different
than the desired time interval in order to achieve proper
read characteristics.
- Yellow Book
- Proprietary Philips/Sony specification (yellow cover)
for CD-ROM, subsequently published as ISO/IEC 10149 (Second
Edition 1995.)
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