±Recent Visitors

Recent Visitors to Com-Central!

±User Info-big


Welcome Anonymous

Nickname
Password

Membership:
Latest: HighestAce
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 6648

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 810
Total: 810
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Community Forums
02: Member Screenshots
03: Home
04: Home
05: Photo Gallery
06: Member Screenshots
07: Community Forums
08: Member Screenshots
09: Member Screenshots
10: News Archive
11: Community Forums
12: Home
13: Member Screenshots
14: Community Forums
15: Downloads
16: Community Forums
17: Community Forums
18: Photo Gallery
19: Community Forums
20: Community Forums
21: Home
22: Community Forums
23: Community Forums
24: Home
25: Photo Gallery
26: Member Screenshots
27: Photo Gallery
28: Home
29: Member Screenshots
30: Home
31: Member Screenshots
32: Home
33: Member Screenshots
34: Member Screenshots
35: Photo Gallery
36: News Archive
37: Community Forums
38: Community Forums
39: Community Forums
40: Photo Gallery
41: Community Forums
42: Photo Gallery
43: Member Screenshots
44: Member Screenshots
45: Community Forums
46: Community Forums
47: Community Forums
48: Home
49: Community Forums
50: Home
51: Community Forums
52: Community Forums
53: Downloads
54: Community Forums
55: Photo Gallery
56: Community Forums
57: Member Screenshots
58: Community Forums
59: Community Forums
60: Home
61: Community Forums
62: Community Forums
63: Home
64: Community Forums
65: Community Forums
66: News Archive
67: Home
68: News Archive
69: News Archive
70: Community Forums
71: Community Forums
72: Home
73: Home
74: Photo Gallery
75: Community Forums
76: Community Forums
77: Community Forums
78: Home
79: Community Forums
80: Community Forums
81: Community Forums
82: Community Forums
83: Community Forums
84: Community Forums
85: Statistics
86: Community Forums
87: Community Forums
88: Community Forums
89: Community Forums
90: Home
91: Community Forums
92: Photo Gallery
93: Member Screenshots
94: Community Forums
95: Home
96: Member Screenshots
97: Community Forums
98: Community Forums
99: News Archive
100: Member Screenshots
101: Community Forums
102: Community Forums
103: Community Forums
104: Home
105: Downloads
106: Community Forums
107: Home
108: Photo Gallery
109: Community Forums
110: News Archive
111: Community Forums
112: Community Forums
113: Statistics
114: Community Forums
115: Community Forums
116: Home
117: Community Forums
118: Community Forums
119: Community Forums
120: Community Forums
121: Home
122: Community Forums
123: Community Forums
124: Community Forums
125: Community Forums
126: Home
127: Community Forums
128: Community Forums
129: Community Forums
130: Community Forums
131: Community Forums
132: Community Forums
133: Community Forums
134: Community Forums
135: Member Screenshots
136: Community Forums
137: Photo Gallery
138: Community Forums
139: Photo Gallery
140: Photo Gallery
141: Community Forums
142: Member Screenshots
143: Home
144: Statistics
145: Downloads
146: Community Forums
147: Home
148: Home
149: Community Forums
150: Downloads
151: Community Forums
152: Photo Gallery
153: Supporters
154: News Archive
155: Community Forums
156: Downloads
157: News Archive
158: Community Forums
159: Community Forums
160: Community Forums
161: Community Forums
162: Member Screenshots
163: Downloads
164: Member Screenshots
165: Member Screenshots
166: News Archive
167: Downloads
168: Community Forums
169: Community Forums
170: Community Forums
171: Community Forums
172: Community Forums
173: Community Forums
174: Downloads
175: Community Forums
176: Photo Gallery
177: News Archive
178: Photo Gallery
179: Member Screenshots
180: Photo Gallery
181: Photo Gallery
182: Photo Gallery
183: Community Forums
184: Community Forums
185: Community Forums
186: Downloads
187: Member Screenshots
188: Community Forums
189: Community Forums
190: Member Screenshots
191: Home
192: Home
193: Community Forums
194: Community Forums
195: Community Forums
196: Community Forums
197: Your Account
198: Community Forums
199: Member Screenshots
200: Home
201: Community Forums
202: Home
203: Community Forums
204: Home
205: Statistics
206: Member Screenshots
207: Community Forums
208: Community Forums
209: Photo Gallery
210: Member Screenshots
211: Member Screenshots
212: Member Screenshots
213: Community Forums
214: Community Forums
215: Community Forums
216: Community Forums
217: Community Forums
218: Downloads
219: Community Forums
220: Community Forums
221: Community Forums
222: News Archive
223: Member Screenshots
224: Member Screenshots
225: Home
226: Community Forums
227: Community Forums
228: Community Forums
229: Community Forums
230: Member Screenshots
231: News Archive
232: Community Forums
233: Downloads
234: Community Forums
235: Community Forums
236: Community Forums
237: Community Forums
238: Member Screenshots
239: Community Forums
240: Member Screenshots
241: Home
242: Downloads
243: Downloads
244: Photo Gallery
245: Member Screenshots
246: Home
247: Community Forums
248: Community Forums
249: Member Screenshots
250: Photo Gallery
251: Downloads
252: Community Forums
253: Community Forums
254: Home
255: Photo Gallery
256: Downloads
257: Community Forums
258: Community Forums
259: News
260: Community Forums
261: Statistics
262: Community Forums
263: Community Forums
264: Community Forums
265: News Archive
266: Home
267: Community Forums
268: Community Forums
269: Member Screenshots
270: News Archive
271: Community Forums
272: Photo Gallery
273: Community Forums
274: Member Screenshots
275: Downloads
276: Downloads
277: Home
278: Home
279: News Archive
280: Community Forums
281: Photo Gallery
282: Community Forums
283: Photo Gallery
284: Community Forums
285: Community Forums
286: Home
287: Community Forums
288: Community Forums
289: Community Forums
290: Community Forums
291: Home
292: Home
293: Community Forums
294: Community Forums
295: Photo Gallery
296: Home
297: Community Forums
298: Downloads
299: Home
300: Home
301: Community Forums
302: Home
303: Community Forums
304: Community Forums
305: Community Forums
306: Community Forums
307: Member Screenshots
308: Community Forums
309: Community Forums
310: Community Forums
311: Community Forums
312: Community Forums
313: Community Forums
314: Photo Gallery
315: Home
316: Photo Gallery
317: Community Forums
318: Community Forums
319: Downloads
320: Community Forums
321: Community Forums
322: Photo Gallery
323: Community Forums
324: Community Forums
325: Member Screenshots
326: Community Forums
327: Home
328: Community Forums
329: Home
330: Community Forums
331: Community Forums
332: Community Forums
333: Photo Gallery
334: Community Forums
335: Community Forums
336: Community Forums
337: Community Forums
338: Community Forums
339: Community Forums
340: Downloads
341: Community Forums
342: Home
343: Member Screenshots
344: Member Screenshots
345: Community Forums
346: News Archive
347: Community Forums
348: Community Forums
349: Community Forums
350: Community Forums
351: Member Screenshots
352: Photo Gallery
353: Photo Gallery
354: Community Forums
355: Home
356: Community Forums
357: Photo Gallery
358: Community Forums
359: Community Forums
360: Community Forums
361: Community Forums
362: Home
363: Home
364: Home
365: Photo Gallery
366: Community Forums
367: Community Forums
368: Community Forums
369: Community Forums
370: Community Forums
371: Community Forums
372: News Archive
373: Downloads
374: Community Forums
375: Home
376: Community Forums
377: Community Forums
378: Photo Gallery
379: Member Screenshots
380: Community Forums
381: Photo Gallery
382: Home
383: Home
384: Downloads
385: Community Forums
386: Community Forums
387: Photo Gallery
388: Member Screenshots
389: Community Forums
390: Community Forums
391: Photo Gallery
392: Photo Gallery
393: Community Forums
394: Home
395: Home
396: Community Forums
397: Member Screenshots
398: Community Forums
399: Community Forums
400: Community Forums
401: Home
402: Photo Gallery
403: Community Forums
404: Photo Gallery
405: Community Forums
406: Photo Gallery
407: News Archive
408: Community Forums
409: News Archive
410: Home
411: Photo Gallery
412: Home
413: Community Forums
414: Community Forums
415: Community Forums
416: Community Forums
417: Community Forums
418: Home
419: Community Forums
420: Community Forums
421: Downloads
422: Community Forums
423: Community Forums
424: Community Forums
425: Community Forums
426: Community Forums
427: Photo Gallery
428: Photo Gallery
429: Home
430: Home
431: Member Screenshots
432: Community Forums
433: Home
434: Community Forums
435: Community Forums
436: Community Forums
437: Member Screenshots
438: Home
439: Community Forums
440: Community Forums
441: News Archive
442: Home
443: Community Forums
444: Community Forums
445: News Archive
446: Community Forums
447: Home
448: Community Forums
449: Community Forums
450: Community Forums
451: Community Forums
452: Community Forums
453: Community Forums
454: Community Forums
455: Community Forums
456: News Archive
457: Photo Gallery
458: Community Forums
459: Member Screenshots
460: Photo Gallery
461: Home
462: Home
463: Community Forums
464: Community Forums
465: Photo Gallery
466: Home
467: Home
468: Community Forums
469: Downloads
470: Statistics
471: Member Screenshots
472: Home
473: Community Forums
474: Community Forums
475: Member Screenshots
476: News
477: Downloads
478: Community Forums
479: Community Forums
480: Community Forums
481: Community Forums
482: Community Forums
483: Community Forums
484: Home
485: Home
486: Community Forums
487: Community Forums
488: Community Forums
489: Community Forums
490: Community Forums
491: News Archive
492: Community Forums
493: Community Forums
494: Home
495: Member Screenshots
496: Community Forums
497: Community Forums
498: Photo Gallery
499: Community Forums
500: Community Forums
501: Photo Gallery
502: Community Forums
503: Community Forums
504: Member Screenshots
505: Community Forums
506: Community Forums
507: Community Forums
508: Community Forums
509: Community Forums
510: Community Forums
511: Member Screenshots
512: Home
513: Member Screenshots
514: Member Screenshots
515: Community Forums
516: Member Screenshots
517: Home
518: Community Forums
519: Community Forums
520: Photo Gallery
521: Home
522: Community Forums
523: Community Forums
524: Community Forums
525: Photo Gallery
526: Downloads
527: Statistics
528: Photo Gallery
529: Community Forums
530: Downloads
531: Community Forums
532: Community Forums
533: Community Forums
534: Community Forums
535: Photo Gallery
536: Community Forums
537: Community Forums
538: Photo Gallery
539: Community Forums
540: Home
541: Downloads
542: Community Forums
543: Community Forums
544: Community Forums
545: Community Forums
546: Downloads
547: Community Forums
548: Home
549: Community Forums
550: Community Forums
551: Home
552: Community Forums
553: Community Forums
554: Photo Gallery
555: Photo Gallery
556: Community Forums
557: Community Forums
558: Community Forums
559: Downloads
560: News Archive
561: Photo Gallery
562: News Archive
563: Community Forums
564: Member Screenshots
565: Home
566: Community Forums
567: Community Forums
568: Community Forums
569: Home
570: Community Forums
571: Member Screenshots
572: Community Forums
573: Downloads
574: Community Forums
575: Community Forums
576: Downloads
577: Home
578: Community Forums
579: Community Forums
580: Home
581: Home
582: Community Forums
583: Home
584: Community Forums
585: Community Forums
586: Member Screenshots
587: Photo Gallery
588: Home
589: Statistics
590: Community Forums
591: Community Forums
592: Photo Gallery
593: Community Forums
594: Community Forums
595: Community Forums
596: Community Forums
597: Community Forums
598: Photo Gallery
599: News
600: Community Forums
601: Community Forums
602: Member Screenshots
603: Community Forums
604: Photo Gallery
605: Photo Gallery
606: Home
607: Community Forums
608: Home
609: Home
610: Community Forums
611: Community Forums
612: Community Forums
613: Community Forums
614: News Archive
615: Community Forums
616: Community Forums
617: Community Forums
618: Home
619: Community Forums
620: Photo Gallery
621: Photo Gallery
622: Community Forums
623: Member Screenshots
624: Home
625: Community Forums
626: Community Forums
627: Community Forums
628: Home
629: Community Forums
630: Member Screenshots
631: Member Screenshots
632: Community Forums
633: Home
634: Community Forums
635: Member Screenshots
636: Community Forums
637: Photo Gallery
638: Member Screenshots
639: Home
640: Community Forums
641: Community Forums
642: Community Forums
643: Community Forums
644: Photo Gallery
645: News Archive
646: Home
647: Member Screenshots
648: Downloads
649: Member Screenshots
650: Community Forums
651: Community Forums
652: Community Forums
653: Home
654: Community Forums
655: News Archive
656: Photo Gallery
657: Home
658: Community Forums
659: News Archive
660: Home
661: Downloads
662: Home
663: Home
664: Community Forums
665: Home
666: Community Forums
667: Community Forums
668: Community Forums
669: Community Forums
670: Home
671: Home
672: Community Forums
673: Community Forums
674: News
675: Home
676: Community Forums
677: Community Forums
678: Photo Gallery
679: Photo Gallery
680: Community Forums
681: Community Forums
682: Community Forums
683: Community Forums
684: Community Forums
685: Home
686: Community Forums
687: Home
688: Statistics
689: Community Forums
690: Treasury
691: Home
692: Photo Gallery
693: Community Forums
694: Home
695: Community Forums
696: Your Account
697: Downloads
698: Community Forums
699: Downloads
700: Home
701: Community Forums
702: Community Forums
703: Community Forums
704: Community Forums
705: Community Forums
706: Photo Gallery
707: Photo Gallery
708: Home
709: Community Forums
710: Home
711: Community Forums
712: Community Forums
713: News
714: Community Forums
715: Statistics
716: Member Screenshots
717: Community Forums
718: Photo Gallery
719: Photo Gallery
720: Community Forums
721: Community Forums
722: Home
723: Community Forums
724: Home
725: Home
726: Home
727: Your Account
728: Community Forums
729: Home
730: Photo Gallery
731: Community Forums
732: Home
733: Home
734: Member Screenshots
735: Photo Gallery
736: Home
737: Community Forums
738: Community Forums
739: Community Forums
740: Community Forums
741: Home
742: Home
743: Community Forums
744: Home
745: Photo Gallery
746: Photo Gallery
747: Community Forums
748: Community Forums
749: Community Forums
750: Statistics
751: Member Screenshots
752: Community Forums
753: Community Forums
754: Community Forums
755: Community Forums
756: Community Forums
757: Home
758: Home
759: Community Forums
760: News Archive
761: Photo Gallery
762: Member Screenshots
763: Home
764: Home
765: Downloads
766: Community Forums
767: Community Forums
768: Member Screenshots
769: Photo Gallery
770: Downloads
771: Home
772: Community Forums
773: Community Forums
774: Home
775: Community Forums
776: Community Forums
777: Community Forums
778: Community Forums
779: Community Forums
780: Community Forums
781: Home
782: Community Forums
783: Photo Gallery
784: Community Forums
785: Photo Gallery
786: Community Forums
787: Photo Gallery
788: Home
789: Home
790: Community Forums
791: Home
792: Community Forums
793: Community Forums
794: Home
795: Member Screenshots
796: Community Forums
797: Downloads
798: Community Forums
799: Home
800: Home
801: Community Forums
802: Home
803: Photo Gallery
804: Community Forums
805: Home
806: Photo Gallery
807: Community Forums
808: Community Forums
809: Community Forums
810: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
Confused about DVD and how it works?
Resolve issues with your computer problems here or read about the latest computer parts and information.
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page     Forum Index ›  Hardware

View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Shadow_Bshwackr
Janitor

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 21, 2005
Posts: 7019
Location: Central Illinois, USA
PostPosted: Sat Mar 04, 2006 11:37 am
Post subject: Confused about DVD and how it works?

This is a pretty good article to clear up any confusion (perhaps..lol) you may have about DVD, Single or Dual Layer DVD and how optical drives work. Wink

ABCs of DVD Drive Abbreviations

by J. Kohrs

The number of different formats available in DVD drives can be confusing to anyone in the market for one. The list is much longer, but to address a few of the common formats, we have DVD-ROM, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM ,DVD+R DL and DVD±RW. Wow! This list of common formats is long enough, no wonder it’s confusing!

What's with all the Formats?!

The reason for various recordable DVD formats is that no one group owns the technology and different groups have chosen to support one technology over another. There is no industrial standard for manufacturers to reference, so for the time being consumers will have a few choices.

The first thing to address is DVD itself, which stands for Digital Versatile Disc. Some may argue that the V stands for Video, but with the capability to store video, audio, and data files, Versatile is definitely the keyword.

Start with the Basics

A DVD-ROM drive is the only one we will address that does not record. ROM stands for Read Only Memory, and refers to the typical drive that can merely read DVDs, as well as CDs (all DVD drives can read CDs). The Lite-On LTD-163-DO-R has attributes representative of your typical DVD-ROM drive, and features a maximum DVD read speed of 16x and a maximum CD read speed of 48x.

Before getting into the different recordable formats, let’s address the basics of what the R and RW stand for, regardless of whether there is a + or – in the middle. R stands for Recordable, which indicates that the disk may be recorded to only once. RW stands for ReWritable, which indicates that the disc may be recorded to more than once, and are generally rated for 1000 rewrites under good conditions.

The DVD-R/-RW format was developed by Pioneer, and was the first format compatible with stand alone DVD players. The group that promotes the technology calls itself the DVD Forum, which is “an international association of hardware manufacturers, software firms, content providers, and other users� with notable members such as Hitachi, Samsung, and Toshiba. The DVD-R/-RW format is based on CD-RW technology and uses a similar approach to burning discs.

The DVD+R/+RW format is a newer format, also based on CD-RW technology, and compatible with a large percentage of stand alone DVD players. The +R/+RW technology is not supported by the DVD Forum, and its main backing comes from a group called the DVD+RW Alliance. The Alliance “is a voluntary group of industry-leading personal computing manufacturers, optical storage and electronics manufacturers� with members such as Dell, Hewlett Packard, Sony, and Phillips Electronics.

The DVD-RAM format is based on PD-RW (Phase-Differential) drives, and actually uses a cartridge to hold the media (just like its PD-RW predecessor). Some DVD-RAM cartridges are double sided, making them ideal for companies to use as system backup, hence DVD-RAM is usually found only in commercial applications, and most end-users won’t ever need to use or see this type of drive. The DVD-RAM standard is also supported by the DVD Forum just like the DVD-R/RW format. However, because of its use of a cartridge (limiting it’s compatibility), and the scarcity and price of the media used, DVD-RAM is a distant third when compared to the DVD+R/+RW and DVD-R/–RW technology.

The +R/+RW and –R/-RW formats are similar, and the main difference DVD+R technology has is the ability to record to multiple layers (with its new DVD+R DL format), where DVD-R can only record to one layer (not all +R drives are capable of dual layer burning, but no -R drives are). The Plextor PX-504U is an example of an external DVD+R/+RW drive capable of recording single layer discs in the +R/+RW format, but also able to read discs recorded by a DVD-R drive.

What is DVD±RW?

DVD±RW is not actually a separate format, but the designation given to drives capable of both –R/–RW and +R/+RW operation. This type of drive is typically called a “Dual Drive� (not to be confused with a “Double Layer� drive) since it can write to both the +R/+RW and –R/–RW formats. The Samsung TS-H552 is a DVD±RW drive capable of reading and writing every format discussed so far, and then some. It takes advantage of DVD+R DL (Double Layer) technology available with the +R format, allowing the appropriate media to store virtually double the 4.37 GB capacity of a typical single layer disc.

The other main thing to consider with DVD burners is selecting the correct media. Media for DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R and DVD+RW media may all look the same, but they are slightly different in order to match the specific recording formats. The price of media for either format is generally the same, with RW media costing a good deal more than R media of either format. Double Layer media is even more expensive, and is the only way for an owner of DVD+R DL drive to take advantage of the tremendous capacity increase. As the amount of Double Layer drives increase in the market, the price of the DVD+R DL media is expected to fall with increased production of the media. DVD Burners (as these drive are often referred to) can be picky about the media supported, so be sure to choose your media wisely.

DVD in a Nutshell

DVD-ROM : Reads DVD discs
DVD+R : Writes to DVD+R media (will also typically write to CD-R and CD-RW media)
DVD+RW : Writes to DVD+RW media (will also typically write to DVD+R, CD-R and CD-RW media)
DVD+R DL : Writes to DVD+R DL (Double Layer) media (will also typically write to DVD+R, DVD+RW, CD-R and CD-RW media; many Double Layer drives are ALSO dual drives – that is, able to write to BOTH +R/RW and –R/RW media)
DVD-RAM : Writes to DVD-RAM cartridges (not in wide use on consumer market – mainly a business format; can also read PD-RW discs. Will not usually be able to write to any other format including CD-R or CD-RW)
DVD-R : Writes to DVD-R media (will also typically write to CD-R and CD-RW media)
DVD-RW : Writes to DVD-RW media (will also typically write to DVD-R, CD-R and CD-RW media)
DVD±RW : Writes to DVD-RW and DVD+RW media (will also typically write to DVD-R, DVD+R, CD-R and CD-RW media; typically called “Dual Drives� since it can burn to two different DVD formats)

Final Words

This article took a look at the more common formats of DVD drives in order to shed some light on all the choices available. The differences between them all may be subtle, but the compatibility issues can be quite frustrating. The simple answer to anyone considering a drive is to forget about + and – by themselves, and shoot for universal compatibility with a good DVD±RW with DVD+R DL support.


J. Kohrs second update article...

Double layer DVD writers and the blank discs for them were just hitting the market then so he didn’t have much to say about the latest and largest-capacity optical disc system. Since then, DL drives and media have popped up all over at decent prices so it’s time to dig a little deeper.

That last sentence is a bit of a pun on the whole double layer thing because it works by burying your data a little deeper into the disc. We’ll discuss why double layer is so exciting, and when you can economize by using the less expensive single layer discs.

1. Refresh on How DVDs Store Data

Most explanations of how optical discs work start with an allusion to LP records with a track that spirals across the face of the disk and a pickup the follows the track to extract the data stored there. Unfortunately, the flat disc and the spiral are about the only things in common.

Optical discs like CD-ROM and DVDs are made up of a clear plastic disc with a layer of very thin metal buried just under the surface of the plastic. The track is actually molded into the plastic, a thin metal layer is laid over the plastic, and the whole thing is sealed up with a clear lacquer finish.

2. Not Grooves: A Trail of Bumps

LP records are easy to visualize because they use a V-shaped groove that forms the track. The sharp point of the pickup fits down in the groove and the groove wall pushes the pickup to keep it tracking the spiral. Optical discs are completely different, with a laser light focused into the spiral track of bumps. An optical sensor picks up the reflections of the bumps and electronic tracking circuits command tiny motors to move the pickup to keep it aligned with the track.

Notice I said track and not tracks? There is a single track that starts at the inside near the center hole and spirals out, just the opposite of the LP record. It’s not concentric tracks like a hard drive or floppy disk. The disk could be any size up to the maximum of 120 millimeters, about 5 inches. There are smaller optical discs available, all the way down to business card-sized with only a few dozen Megabytes of storage.

Speaking of tracks and dimensions, they pack almost 8 miles of data in that single track. The double layer DVD disc has about 15 miles of storage track. That means the track has to be wound pretty tight with a pitch of only 0.74 micrometers (millionths of a meter) between them. That takes some pretty precise tracking!

3. Ones and Zeros Become Lands and Bumps



Along the track, there are flat reflective areas called lands. This is really just the non-bumped part of the disc surface. Then, there are the non-reflective bumps. A flat reflective area represents a binary 1, while a non-reflective bump is a binary 0. The DVD drive shines a laser at the surface of the DVD and can detect the reflective areas and the bumps by the amount of laser light they reflect. The optical pickup converts the reflections into 1’s and 0’s to extract digital data from the disc.

This describes how commercially-pressed audio CDs, CD-ROMs and DVD movies work. They are read-only devices with the simplest construction and are the easiest to explain. A recordable disc, however, also needs to allow the drive to write data onto the disc.

In order for a recordable DVD-R or DVD+R disc to work, there must be a way for a laser to create a non-reflective area on the disc. These discs have an extra layer that is a dye that can be changed by shining a strong laser beam on it. On a blank recordable disc, the entire surface of the disc is reflective. The laser can shine through the dye and reflect off the metal layer. When the drive writes data to the disc, the laser heats up the dye layer and changes its transparency, which is the equivalent of a non-reflective bump.

4. The Trick of Double layer

Now we know how a single layer DVD works, both the prerecorded type and the ones you can burn at home. Just how the heck do they put two layers of data on one side of the disc? It would be real easy to say magic at this point, but the real explanation is pretty simple.

Think about how when you walk up to a window with a screen and look out that you see the scene outside and don’t even see the screen. It’s close to your face so it’s out of focus and you don’t even notice it is there. If you back up a little and force your eyes to focus on the screen, it pops right out and you can see it and the scene outside is all a blur.

Double layer DVDs pull a similar trick. There is only one reflective layer, but there are two layers of dye where the actual data is stored. The lens in the pickup focuses the beam on the top layer to read the first bunch of data, and then the lens focuses the beam on the bottom layer and sees right through the top layer. Because the top layer is out of focus, the data stored there just disappears and the bottom layer is read instead.

All that build up and detailed explanation to find out it’s a simple trick of optics that even your own eyeballs can do!

5. So What’s the Benefit?
When recordable DVD media first hit the market, it hadn’t grown up yet and capacity wasn’t too much bigger than CD-R. As DVD-R and DVD+R came of age, the capacity of a single-sided disc settled on 4.7 Gigabytes. That was enough room for a two-hour medium resolution compressed movie. It’s also a handy size for normal backups of your hard drive or all the digital photos from your vacation even if you shot them all in high quality mode.

But, what if you want to record a truly high definition movie? It won’t fit in 4.7 Gigabytes. Even a medium definition movie won’t fit if it extends past two hours. How many movies come with a separate disc for the extra features? It’s a pain to have to get out of the easy chair to change discs. The double layer DVD solves this by having 8.5 Gigabytes of storage without having to flip the disc.

6. What Do I Need?

Naturally, older DVD drives don’t have the mechanism to switch focus between the two levels of a double layer disc. The pickup has to be physically moved to change the focus point from top to bottom, so you need a drive with this built in. The LG 16x Double Layer DVD±RW/DVD-RAM IDE Drive is typical and attractively priced. Computer drives that can read double layer usually also write double layer and that’s the case here. Be aware that double layer DVDs have to be written at the 4X speed as opposed to the 16X for single layer discs.

7. Blank DVDs Are a Bargain

CD-R media are really inexpensive these days, with recordable DVDs being a little more expensive. But, are they? A single layer DVD-R or DVD+R can hold as much as seven CD-Rs. That means that if a DVD is less than seven times more expensive, it is actually cheaper than a CD-R for those large data storage tasks. They are also a lot more convenient than shuffling a stack of CD-Rs in and out of your drive.

If you just want to test the waters without springing for a tall spindle of blank double layer DVDs, try the Verbatim Double Layer Solution Kit (DVD+R, DVD+R DL, DVD+RW) , which gives you a sampling of three different blank optical disc types. If your storage needs are less than about 4 Gigabytes, then stick with the single layer discs.

8. HD DVD versus Blu-Ray

While double layer DVD seems like a huge amount of storage, the requirements of super high definition video and huge hard drive backup push the optical drive manufacturers to even larger capacity discs. HD DVD is a refined version of the DVD we use now. It uses the same trick of double layers to almost double the capacity up to 30 Gigabytes per side; backing up a full image of a 160 Gigabyte hard drive takes a half dozen discs.

Blu-Ray answers this with the promise of up to 200 Gigabyte discs eventually becoming available. They pack the data in even tighter than HD DVD and can stack up several layers to increase storage.

Unfortunately, HD DVD and Blu-Ray will probably be only available as commercially produced DVDs for viewing movies for the near-term. Somewhere down the road, we’ll start seeing recordable versions to mount in our computer’s drive bays.

Final Words

While recording movies on single layer DVDs might be fine with the old standard TV, now that you have a widescreen flat panel television that is capable of HDTV, why suffer degradation of image quality by over-compressing the video? Get a double layer DVD drive for your computer and stock up on double layer DVD blank discs to capture all the detail.

The same goes for your computer backups. Put your whole photo collection on one 8.5 Gigabyte double layer disc. Don’t worry about running out of space on a single disc. Though the double layer discs may be more expensive, they hold twice as much and take up less storage space than a pair of single layer discs or a dozen or more CD-Rs.


The Blu-Ray is getting quite a bit of contorversy and since Sony is involved, most think they're up to something...(remember the root kit thing?) Still, if it hits the masses, and it will sooner or later, storage such as CDR's will soon fall into the "A" drive pit... Wink
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
Shades
Forum Tree-Rat

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 07, 2005
Posts: 6475
Location: 3rd Branch up, 'Ye Olde Oak', Green Wood.
PostPosted: Mon Mar 13, 2006 6:47 pm
Post subject: Re: Confused about DVD and how it works?

It's not only Sony involved in Blue-Ray but they have taken a massive lead in the tech race which is why they're getting all the publicity.
They've managed to record 2Gb of information onto a piece of tissue paper.
Now, a tissue paper is not the best medium to deal with the sort of data we deal in but, if they can do that with tissue paper, you can imagine the possibilities of doing the same with the blue ray equivalent of a cd style data carrier.
It's already out-performing the write speeds of current equipment.
The most likely covert / sinister activity I reckon is going on is that the sob's have all this technology ready to go right now and are holding off so they can shift their old cd/dvd hardware stock out to us poor sob's, who then have to buy Blue-Ray replacements.


_________________
Skwerl's place.

Com-Central's cutest, fluffiest, twitchiest, tail.
CPU > Intel i9-9900k (o/c 4.9GHz); COOLING > BeQuiet! Dark Rock Pro 4;
MOBO > ASUS PRIME Z390-A; RAM > 2x32GB Corsair LPX 2666MHz;
GPU > Gigabyte GEFORCE GTX650Ti PCI-e 3.0 2Gb GDDR5;
AUDIO > Creative X-Fi Xtreme Music (plus - Universal Audio UAD2 Quad Custom accelerator);
HDD > 3x1TB+ M.2. SSDs; LCD > DELL - S2419HGF (1920x1080);
PSU > 650W be quiet Straight Power 11 - 80+ Gold;
CASE > BeQuiet! SILENT BASE 601; OS > Windows 11 Home Advanced (64-bit).
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website ICQ Number
Shades
Forum Tree-Rat

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 07, 2005
Posts: 6475
Location: 3rd Branch up, 'Ye Olde Oak', Green Wood.
PostPosted: Mon Mar 13, 2006 10:55 pm
Post subject: Re: Confused about DVD and how it works?

Yall might be interested in this too.
WITH ALL THE FUSS going on between the Blu-ray and HD-DVD camps, here in Hangover, news of the third way, EVD, is starting to emerge.
London-based firm, New Medium Enterprises, got together with Beijing-based E-World Technology, to define a standard which now has a support from around 10 other companies, mostly located in mainland China.

The Enhanced Versatile Disc is a new High Density standard with a far more reasonable price expectation for both media and players. EVD media has less capacity than either Blu-ray or HD DVD - but it's cheaper and has already become the optical disc standard in China. It is expected to become a major player across developing markets.

Although the standard is currently read-only, E-World expects to release a recordable version by CeBIT 2007.

The makers said they were looking to switching the red laser for a blue one, once the blue-laser technology matures and comes down in price.


Anyone recall the outcome of the JVC / Betamax saga? lolol

_________________
Skwerl's place.

Com-Central's cutest, fluffiest, twitchiest, tail.
CPU > Intel i9-9900k (o/c 4.9GHz); COOLING > BeQuiet! Dark Rock Pro 4;
MOBO > ASUS PRIME Z390-A; RAM > 2x32GB Corsair LPX 2666MHz;
GPU > Gigabyte GEFORCE GTX650Ti PCI-e 3.0 2Gb GDDR5;
AUDIO > Creative X-Fi Xtreme Music (plus - Universal Audio UAD2 Quad Custom accelerator);
HDD > 3x1TB+ M.2. SSDs; LCD > DELL - S2419HGF (1920x1080);
PSU > 650W be quiet Straight Power 11 - 80+ Gold;
CASE > BeQuiet! SILENT BASE 601; OS > Windows 11 Home Advanced (64-bit).
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website ICQ Number
Rudder
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Feb 17, 2005
Posts: 115
Location: Maricopa, AZ
PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2011 6:35 pm
Post subject: Re: Confused about DVD and how it works?

With all of that taken into account I think I will scrub the idea of making a DVD double sided disk to hold the download UP 3.0RC4 and the Mega download for my squad members. First I don't have a DVD drive to support a 2 sided format and who knows what each squad member has in his or her's computer.
Rudder

_________________
A midair collision can ruin your whole day
Back to top
View user's profile Send e-mail Visit poster's website MSN Messenger
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index ›  Hardware
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 6 Hours



Jump to:  


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum