CD Recordable Glossary
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a-characters
The character set used in the ISO 9660 Volume
Descriptors. It consists of capital A to Z, digits 0 to 9, and the following
symbols: (space) ! " % & ' ( ) = * + , - . / : ; < ? > _
A-Time
(or absolute time) In an audio CD, the time elapsed since the beginning of the
disc. It can be used in determining the start and stop times of sound segments
for programming an application on a mixed-mode disc,
measuring from the very beginning of the data area (including the computer data
in Track 1).
Aspect Ratio
An image's width to height ratio.
ASPI
Advanced SCSI Programmer's Interface. A layer of code which
manages communication between software and SCSI cards.
Authoring
What you do to create an application which may eventually be stored on CD. For
example, if you wish to create a multimedia game or presentation, you will need
authoring software that allows you to combine sound, graphics, and text with
user interactivity. When you have finished creating your application with
authoring software, you can use CD recording software such as Easy
CD Creator or Toast
to write it to CD.
Auto-Insert
Notification
A feature of Windows operating systems which causes an audio CD to be played or
an application disc to launch an application (for some discs) as soon as the
disc is mounted in a CD drive. With earlier CD-R software it was recommended
that this feature be turned off, but with Easy
CD Creator and DirectCD
it is preferable to leave it on. This setting must be made for each CD unit
separately; in Windows 95 it can be made in Control Panel | System | Device
Manager | CD-ROM | [your CD-ROM drive] | Settings
Barcode
A unique code for a compact disc. With recordable CDs, this number is often
printed in the clear inner ring of the disc. Some CD recorders can also read
this information digitally.
Block
See sector.
Blue Book
The official standard which dictates the format of CD Extra
discs.
Bootable
A CD (or floppy, hard disk, or other storage media) from which a computer can be
started up, because it contains all the operating system software the computer
needs to run. A bootable CD contains a bootable image - a file which is an exact
representation of a boot floppy or hard drive. Bootable CDs are usually made
according to the El Torito standard.
Buffer
An amount of memory which temporarily stores data to help compensate for
differences in the transfer rate of data from one device to another. In CD
recorders, the buffer helps to prevent buffer underruns.
Buffer Underrun
A buffer underrun occurs when your computer system cannot keep up the steady
stream of data required for CD recording. The CD recorder has an internal memory
buffer to protect against interruptions and slowdowns, but if the interruption
is so long that the recorder's buffer is completely emptied, a buffer underrun
occurs, writing stops, and most often the recordable CD is ruined. See also About
Buffer Underruns.
Caddy
The plastic and metal carrier into which a CD must be inserted before it is
loaded into some CD-ROM drives or CD recorders (others have a tray which slides
out to receive the disc, and do not need caddies).
CD Bridge
A set of specifications defining a way of recording CD-I information
on a CD-ROM XA disc. Used for Photo CD
and Video CD.
CD Extra or CD Plus
A multisession disc containing a number of audio tracks in the first session,
and one CD-ROM XA data track in the second session.
Additional characteristics are defined in the Blue Book standard. An alternative
to mixed-mode for combining standard CD-DA
audio (which can be played in a normal audio player), and a computer
application, on a single disc.
CD+G
(aka karaoke) A special disc disc format in which simple graphics and text are
stored in the subchannels of an audio disc, but you need
a special player to read and display this information. The data in the
subchannels cannot be copied with most current systems or software.
CD-DA
Compact Disc-Digital Audio. Jointly developed by Philips and Sony and launched
in October, 1982, CD-DA was the first incarnation of the compact disc, used to
digitally record and play back music. The standard under which CD-DA discs are
recorded is known as the Red Book.
Audio tracks on CD-DA discs are stored at 44,100
Hz, 16 Bits, stereo.
CD-I
A compact disc format (no longer used) developed by Philips, designed to allow
interactive multimedia applications to be run on a player attached to a
television. The standard document defining CD-I is called the Green Book.
CD-R
Compact disc-recordable. When referring to recordable discs (media),
"CD-R" is often used to refer to write-once discs, in contrast to CD-RW.
See also Recordable Disc.
CD-ROM
Compact Disc-Read Only Memory. A standard for compact disc to be used as digital
memory media for personal computers. The specifications for CD-ROM were first
defined in the Yellow Book.
CD-ROM Drive
A peripheral device attached to a computer which allows it to read/play a CD-ROM
disc. All CD-ROM players can also play back audio CDs, but you need external
headphones or speakers to hear them.
CD-ROM XA
"XA" stands for Extended Architecture. CD-ROM XA is an extension of
the Yellow Book standard, generally consistent with the ISO
9660 logical format but designed to add better audio and video capabilities
(taken from the CD-I standard) so that CD-ROM could more
easily be used for multimedia applications. CD-ROM XAwas abandoned as an
independent multimedia format, but Photo CD discs are
written in the CD-ROM XA physical format.
CD-RW
CD-ReWritable. CD recordable media which can be erased and re-recorded.
CD-RW media can only be written in a CD-RW recorder, not in a normal CD
recorder, though a CD-RW recorder can also record standard
CD-R discs. More
information on the read-back compatibility of CD-RW discs.
CD Text
An audio CD format in which up to 5000 characters of disc information (title,
artist, song titles, etc.) is written into the disc Table of
Contents. This information is displayed when the disc is played back on CD
Text-enabled players.
CD-WO
Compact Disc-Write Once. A rarely-used term for recordable compact disc.
Close Disc
To "close" a recordable disc so that no further data can be written to
it. This is done when the last session's lead-in
is written. The next writeable address on the disc is not recorded in
that lead-in, so the CD recorder in subsequent attempts to write has no way of
knowing where to begin writing. Note: It is NOT necessary to close a disc in
order to read it in a normal CD-ROM drive.
Close Session
When a session is closed, information about its contents is written into the
disc's Table of Contents, and a lead-in and lead-out
are written to prepare the disc for a subsequent session.
Coaster
Popular term for a ruined recordable CD, named after the round object you rest
your drinking glass on so that it doesn't mark the table.
Cue Sheet
In Easy-CD Pro for Windows 3.1, a list of tracks which will be written one after
the other in the same session without user intervention. Generally used to
create multi-track audio or mixed-mode discs.
d-characters
The character set used in ISO 9660 Level 1
filenames, if the standard is strictly adhered to (which is not always
necessary). Consists of capital A to Z, digits 0 to 9, and the underscore symbol
( _ ).
DAT
Digital Audio Tape.
Data Area
In ISO 9660, the space on a CD-ROM where the user data is
written. It begins at the physical sector address 00:02:16.
Digital Audio Extraction
The process of copying CD-DA audio tracks digitally, from your CD recorder or
CD-ROM drive, to hard disk or to recordable CD. Not all CD-ROM drives support
this (but most CD recorders do)! For
more information.
Disc-at-Once
A method of writing CDs in which one or more tracks are written in a single
operation, and the disc is closed, without ever turning off the writing laser.
Contrast with Track-at-Once. Not all CDrecorders support
Disc-at-Once. For
more information.
Disc Image
A single large file which is an exact representation of the whole set of data
and programs as it will appear on a CD, in terms of both content and logical
format. This may be an ISO 9660 image (adhering strictly to the ISO 9660
standard), or some proprietary format such as the .cif format used by Easy
CD Creator.
EAN
See UPC.
ECC
Error Correction Code. A system of scrambling data and recording redundant data
onto disc as it is recorded. During playback, this redundant information helps
to detect and correct errors that may arise during data transmission.
EDC
Error Detection Code. 32 bits in each sector which are used to detect errors in
the sector data.
EnhancedCD
See CD Extra.
Extent
A sequential set of sectors in which a file or portion of
a file is recorded.
File System
A data structure that translates the physical (sector)
view of a disc into a logical (files, directories) structure, which helps both
computers and users locate files. In other words, it records where files and
directories are located on the disc. See also Logical
Format.
Firmware
In a CD recorder, firmware is the programming instructions contained on a ROM
chip within the CD recorder which tell the recorder how to respond to commands
issued by software. Some firmware is flash-upgradeable, meaning that you can
upgrade the firmware by running a piece of software on the computer attached to
the recorder. Other firmware is coded into non-rewriteable chip, so the entire
chip must be changed in order to upgrade the firmware.
Frame
A single, complete picture in a video or film. A video frame is made up of two
interlaced fields of either 525 lines (NTSC) or 625 lines (PAL).
Full-motion video for NTSC runs at 30 frames per second (fps); for PAL, 25 fps.
Film runs at 24 fps.
Gap
The gap (more correctly called a pause) is a space dividing tracks on a CD. In
some situations a gap is required by the standards (Red Book
and other "color" books). For example, if you have data and audio
tracks within the same session, they must be separated by a gap. Also, there
must be a gap of 2 to 3 seconds preceding the first track on a disc.
The gap which "belongs" to a track is actually the gap before it, not the one after it. This is why on some audio CD players you will see a countdown (-02, -01, etc.) before a track begins - it’s counting down to the next track, not counting up from the end of the last one.
Header Field
Four bytes recorded at the beginning of each sector which
tell the address of the sector (expressed as a Logical Block Number) and the
mode in which the sector is recorded.
HFS
The file system used by the Macintosh operating system to organize data on hard
and floppy disks. Can also be used for CD-ROMs.
High Sierra Format
The standard logical format for CD-ROM originally proposed by the High Sierra
Group, on which the ISO 9660 standard is based;
essentially identical to ISO 9660. The original High Sierra format is no longer
used.
Hybrid
Under the Orange Book standard for recordable CD, hybrid
means a recordable disc on which one or more sessions are already recorded, but
the disc is not closed, leaving space open for future recording.
However, in popular use the term "hybrid" often refers to a disc containing both DOS/Windows and Macintosh software, which on a DOS/Windows platform is seen as a normal ISO 9660 disc, while on a Mac it appears as an HFS disc.
Indexes
Indexes provide additional starting points within a single audio track.
Not all audio CD players support indexes. Index markers are written into the Q subchannel
and are incremented by 1 sequentially during the track.
ISO 9660 Format
The most common international standard for the logical
format for files and directories on a CD-ROM. Some other common logical
formats such as Joliet and Rock Ridge
are extensions of ISO 9660.
ISO 9660 Image
See disc image.
ISO 9660 Interchange Levels
Methods of recording and naming files on disc under the ISO
9660 standard. There are three nested, downward-compatible Levels.
In Level 1 (the lowest common denominator, developed with DOS file naming limitations in mind):
In Level 2, again, each file must be written on
disc in a single extent, filenames may be up to 255 characters long.
In Level 3 a file may be written in multiple extents, so it is used for packet
writing. Filenames may be up to 255 characters long.
ISRC
International Standard Recording Code. Some recorders allow the ISRC to be
recorded for each audio track on a disc. The code is made up of: Country Code (2
ASCII characters), Owner Code (3 ASCII characters), Year of Recording (2
digits), Serial Number (5 digits).
Jewel Case
The hinged plastic case in which CDs are often stored.
Jewel Case Sleeve
The pieces of paper which can be inserted into the jewel case to help identify
the contents of the CD stored in the case..
Joliet
Joliet is an extension of the ISO 9660 standard,
developed by Microsoft to allow CDs to be recorded using long filenames, and
using the Unicode international character set. Joliet allows you to use
filenames up to 64 characters in length, including spaces. For
more information.
Lead-In
An area at the beginning of each session on a recordable compact disc which is
left blank for the session's Table
of Contents. The lead-in is written when a session is closed, and takes up
4500 sectors on disc (1 minute, or roughly 9 megabytes).
The lead-in also contains next writeable address on the disc, so that future
sessions can be added (unless the disc is closed).
Lead-Out
An area at the end of a session which indicates that the
end of the data has been reached. The first lead-out on a disc is 6750 sectors
(1.5 minutes, about 13 megabytes) long; any subsequent lead-outs are 2250
sectors (.5 minute, about 4 megabytes). Writing the lead-out closes the session.
CD-ROM drives and CD audio players cannot see the data/audio in a session until
the session is closed.
Link Block
A block (aka sector)of digital rubbish which is written
each time the recording laser is turned on (before) or off (after) writing a track
or a packet. See also Run-in/Run-out
Blocks.
Linked Multisession
A disc containing more than one session, in which all (or
selected) data from the various sessions can be seen as if it had all been
recorded in a single session. For
more information.
Logical Block
The smallest addressable space on a disc. Each logical block is identified by a
unique Logical Block Number (LBN), assigned in order starting from 0 at the
beginning of the disc. Under the ISO 9660 standard, all
data on a CD is addressed in terms of Logical Block Numbers.
Logical Format / Logical Structure / File System
A file system such as ISO 9660 translates the
sector-by-sector view of a compact disc into a virtual "tree" of
directories and files, which makes it easier for both humans and computers to
use the information on the disc. UDF is another example of a
file system which can be used to write CDs.
M
Mastering
Technically, refers to the process of creating a glass master from which compact
discs will be reproduced in quantity. In desktop recordable CD systems,
mastering is done together with premastering by the desktop CD recorder, and the
term is generally used to mean "recording."
Media
Recordable media - blank CD-R or CD-RW
discs.
Mixed-Mode Disc
A compact disc including both computer data and CD-DA
tracks. The data is all contained in Track 1, and the audio in one or more
following tracks. Contrast with CD Extra.
MMC
A standard command set used by some CD recorders. Many newer recorders follow
this standard, though many of them also interpret it differently (so there are
still differences in how software must address these recorders, in spite of the
standard).
Mode 1
A somewhat inaccurate way of referring to the CD-ROM
physical format. More
information.
Mode 2
A not-quite-accurate but common way of referring to the CD-ROM
XA physical format. More
information
Mount
To install a compact disc so that the computer recognizes its presence and can
read data from it.
MP3
MP3 is a format for compressing digital audio files. It is a "lossy"
compression scheme, meaning that MP3 files do not have quite as high quality as
the standard CD-DA audio tracks they are encoded from. MP3
files can be automatically converted and recorded directly to CD as standard
audio tracks using Easy
CD Creator 4 or Toast
4.
MPEG
Motion Picture Experts Group, a standards organization responsible for the MPEG
1 and MPEG 2 standards for the compression of full-motion video.
MSCDEX
Microsoft DOS extensions for CD-ROM. Allows the DOS and Windows 3.x operating
systems to recognize a CD-ROM disc.
MultiRead
An OSTA standard for
CD-ROM and DVD-ROM drives. Drives which follow the MultiRead standard can read
commercial CDs (audio and data), CD-R discs, and CD-RW
discs. They can also read discs written in fixed- or variable-length packets.
For more information, see the MultiRead
Specification.
Note! Drives which have the MultiRead logo issued by Hewlett-Packard have been tested for compliance with the MultiRead specification. Drives labeled as "multi-read" (without the logo) probably have not been tested for compliance with the specification, and may not be able to read CD-RW or packet-written discs.
Multisession
A method of adding data incrementally to a CD in more than one recording
session. If data is linked between session, all data on a multisession disc,
when read on a multisession CD-ROM drive, may be seen as part of a single logical
structure. Multisession is very different from packet
writing. For
more information.
Multivolume
A disc containing multiple sessions which are not linked together, so that each
"volume" on the disc must be read as if it were a separate disc. You
can read different sessions on a disc using the Session Selector in Easy
CD Creator Deluxe.
On the Fly
To write on the fly means to write directly from source data to CD data without
first writing a disc image.
Optimum Power Calibration Area
(OPC Area) A special area near the center of the recordable disc. Before writing
a track on a disc, the CD recorder must adjust the amount of power applied to
the writing laser to an optimum level for each individual disc. The optimum
calibration area is reserved for this purpose.
Orange Book
The Philips/Sony specification for Compact Disc Magneto-Optical (CD-MO) and
Write-Once (CD-WO) systems - in other words, the standard by which recordable
CDs are recorded.
Packet Writing
A method of writing data on a CD in small increments (contrast with Track-at-Once
and Disc-at-Once). Packets can be of fixed
or variable length. Adaptec's DirectCD
software requires packet writing. For
more information.
PAL
Phase Alteration by Line. The standard used for broadcast television in much of
Europe and Asia, with a resolution of 768 pixels x 576 horizontal lines at 25
frames per second.
PCA
Power Calibration Area. See OPC.
Photo CD
A compact disc format based on the CD-ROM XA and Orange
Book Hybrid Disc specifications, used to store photographic images for
display and printing.
Physical Format
The physical format of a compact disc determines how data is recorded in each
sector. The various physical formats are defined by the color book standards
(e.g., Red Book, Yellow Book, etc.) For
more information.
PMA
(Program Memory Area) On a recordable disc, an area which
"temporarily" contains the Table of
Contents information when tracks are written in a session
which is not yet closed. When the session is closed,
this same information is written in the session lead-in.
Premastering
The process of preparing data to be recorded onto a compact disc. This includes
dividing the data into sectors and recording those sectors
with the appropriate header (address) and error
correction information. In the case of recordable CD systems, premastering
and mastering are done in one operation, resulting in a
ready-to-read compact disc.
Random
Erase
(Available with CD-RW discs and DirectCD
for Windows 2.x). The ability to erase a single file at a time from a
CD-ReWritable disc, freeing up disc space for immediate re-use, just as you
would do on a hard or floppy disk.
Recordable Disc
The media used in recordable CD systems. The blank disc is made of a bottom
layer of polycarbonate, with a preformed track spiral which the recording laser
follows when inscribing information onto the disc. A translucent layer of
recordable material is laid on top of the polycarbonate, then a reflective layer
(gold or silver colored). On top there is a thin layer of lacquer and sometimes
a printed label. The standard recordable disc is "write-once" -- data
written to it cannot be erased, although it is possible to add data in a later
session (see Multisession). For erasable/rewritable
discs, see CD-RW.
Red Book
The Philips/Sony specification for audio (CD-DA) compact
discs.
Rock Ridge
An extension of the ISO 9660 file system designed to
support UNIX file system information (such as longer filenames and deeper
directory structures).
Romeo
A file naming option in Easy-CD 95 and Easy-CD Pro 95 (both obsolete and
replaced by Easy CD
Creator) which allowed you to write files to disc with names up to 128
characters long, including spaces. This was a stopgap solution to the problem
that Windows NT 3.5a did not support Joliet. Romeo did not
support the Unicode character set nor associated DOS (short) filenames. Romeo
filenames can be read on Windows 95 and NT 3.51 systems. Romeo discs can be read
on Macintosh systems if the filenames are shorter than 31 characters. For
more information.
Run-In/Run-Out Blocks
Blocks of data written before and after a packet or a track,
to allow the recorder to synchronize with the data on disc, and to finish up
interleaved data. Four run-in blocks and two run-out blocks are written for each
packet.
SCSI
Small Computer System Interface (pronounced "scuzzy"). An interface
which allows up to seven peripheral devices to be linked to a single controller.
Sector
The smallest recordable unit on a CD. A disc can contain [(75 sectors per
second) x (60 seconds per minute) x (number of minutes on disc)] sectors. The
amount of data contained in the sector depends on what physical
format it is recorded in; for "regular" CD-ROM
data, you can fit 2048 bytes (2 kilobytes) of data into a sector.For
more information.
Sequential
Erase
(Available with CD-RW discs.) Erasing the entire disc so
that it can be re-used.
Session
As defined in the Orange Book, a recorded segment of a
compact disc which may contain one or more tracks of any
type (data or audio). In data recording, there is usually only one track per
session, but there may be multiple sessions on a disc. In audio recording, all
audio tracks should be in a single session. A lead-in and lead-out
are recorded for every session on a disc.
Session-at-Once
Session-at-Once is a subset of Disc-at-Once, used for CD
Extra. In Session-at-Once recording, a first session
containing multiple audio tracks is recorded in a single
pass, then the laser is turned off, but the disc is not closed. Then a second
(data) session is written and closed.
SIF (Standard Input Format)
A format for compressed video specified by the MPEG committee, with resolutions
of 352 (horizontal) x 240 (vertical) x 29.97 (fps) for NTSC
and 352 (horizontal) x 288 (vertical) x 25.00 (fps) for PAL.
SIF-resolution video provides an image quality similar to VHS tape.
Spindown
Many new CD-ROM drives save power by spinning down (stopping the drive's spin)
when the drive is not in use. This may cause buffer
underruns when recording a CD by copying tracks or files from another CD-ROM
drive, if the drive "goes to sleep" and cannot be woken up quickly
enough to keep up with the CD recorder's demand for a constant stream of data.
Subchannels (or
subcodes)
Audio CDs have 8 subchannels of non-audio data interleaved with the audio data,
called the P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, and W channels. You can think of them as small,
separate streams of data running alongside the audio, which can be read by a
player at the same time as the audio, if the player is "smart" enough
to interpret them. For example, CD+Graphics discs (karaoke) store rudimentary
graphics and text in the subchannels, but you need a special player to read and
display this information.
The P and Q channels are used to tell an audio player how to play back an audio disc. The Q channel contains the index markers. In the pause (gap) before a track begins, the index marker is set to 0 (zero). When a track begins, the index marker changes to 1. (If a track contains subindexes, these are incremented by 1 sequentially during the track. In this case the Q channel might contain 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) When the track ends, the Q channel index marker goes back to 0, then re-starts at 1 when the next track begins.w
Table of
Contents
For a whole disc or any session within a disc, shows the
number of tracks, their starting locations, and the total
length of the data area. The TOC does NOT show the
length of each track, only its starting point.
Thermal Calibration
Note: This is not an issue with most new hard drives.
As a hard disk works, it heats up. Most materials
expand when heated. This means that a hard disk's read and write heads must be
periodically recalibrated. The thermal calibration operation calibrates the hard
drive's servo system to ensure that the disk's read and write heads remain
precisely over the data tracks, compensating for temperature changes during
normal operations. The thermal calibration operation, depending upon the hard
disk, may require many hundreds of milliseconds to complete. During calibration,
no data is read from or written to the hard disk, so during all or part of this
process the drive will not be responsive to data requests. If the thermal
calibration process takes too long during CD recording, the CD recorder's buffer
will be emptied, and a buffer underrun or other recording error may occur. You
may also notice the effect of thermal calibration as a small click or pop when
you play back digital audio. Most modern hard disks handle thermal recalibration
in a way which will not interrupt the data flow.
Track
Every time you write to CD, you will create at least one track, which is
preceded by a gap. Any session may
contain one or more tracks. Multiple tracks within a session may be of the same
or of different types -- for example, a mixed-mode disc
contains data and audio tracks -- though it is more common for multiple tracks
within a single session to be all audio tracks.
Track-at-Once
A method of writing data to disc. Each time a track (data
or audio) is completed, the recording laser is stopped, even if another track
will be written immediately afterwards. Link and run
blocks are written when the laser is turned on and off.
UDF
Video CD
A standard for displaying full motion pictures with associated audio on CD. The
video and sound are compressed together using the MPEG 1
standard, and recorded onto a CD Bridge disc. Video CD
disc contains one data track recorded in CD-ROM
XA Mode 2 Form 2. It is always the first track on the disc (Track 1). The ISO
9660 file structure and a CD-I application program are
recorded in this track, as well as the Video CD Information Area which gives
general information about the Video CD disc. After the data track, video is
written in one or more subsequent tracks within the same session. These tracks
are also recorded in Mode 2 Form 2. The session is closed after all tracks have
been written.
Volume
Under the ISO 9660 standard, "volume" refers to
a single CD-ROM disc. However, "volume" is often used to mean a session
on a multisession disc which is not linked to other
sessions.
Volume Descriptors
For an ISO 9660 disc, the Volume Descriptors are a set of
optional information fields recorded at the beginning of the data area on the
disc. They were originally designed for the needs of CD-ROM publishers. The full
set of Volume Descriptors is as follows:
System Name: The operating system under which the application will run. This Volume Descriptor may contain a maximum of 32 a-characters, and its use is optional.
Volume Name: This is the disc name which is displayed by your operating system when the disc is mounted. It may contain a maximum of 32 a-characters, and its use is recommended.
Volume Set Name: If the CD you are preparing is part of a set of discs, every disc in the set may have an identical Volume Set Name, recorded in this field. The Volume Set Name may contain a maximum of 32 d-characters, and its use is optional.
Publisher’s Name: Identifies the publisher of the disc. Maximum 128 a-characters allowed, use is optional.
Data Preparer’s Name: Records the name of author of the content of the disc. Maximum 128 a-characters allowed, use optional.
Application Name: Records the name of a particular application needed to access the data on the disc, if any. Maximum 128 a-characters allowed, use optional.
Copyright File Name: Authors can protect their work with a copyright notice stored in a file which must be placed in the root directory. The name of this file may be recorded in the Copyright File Name Volume Descriptor. Maximum: 8+3 d-characters, use optional.
Abstract File Name: This field records the name of an file stored in the root directory which describes the contents of the disc. Maximum: 8+3 d-characters, use optional.
Bibliographic File Name: This field stores the name of a file (which may be recorded in any directory) containing bibliographic information such as an ISBN number. Maximum: 8+3 d-characters, use optional.
Date Fields: There is a Volume Descriptor field for each of four dates (Creation, Modification, Expiration, Effective), in the format: year, month, day; hour, minute, second. All these fields are optional.
Wave files
Wave (which have the extension .wav) are a standard Windows format for digital
audio. When you copy ("extract") a track from an audio CD to hard
disk, you will usually be copying it to a Wave file.
Wave files can have various qualities of sound depending on how they are created or saved, but the most common is 44,100 Hz, 16 Bit, stereo (the same standard as audio tracks on CD).
YYellow Book
The book which sets out the standard developed by Philips and Sony for the physical
format of compact discs to be used for information storage (CD-ROM).
Copyright
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