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- Optical Storage MediumsJames Ng The most common way of storing data in a computer is
- magnetic. We have hard drives and floppy disks (soon making way to the CD-ROM), both of
- which can store some amount of data. In a disk drive, a read/write head (usually a coil of
- wire) passes over a spinning disk, generating an electrical current, which defines a bit as
- either a 1 or a 0. There are limitations to this though, and that is that we can only make
- the head so small, and the tracks and sectors so close, before the drive starts to suffer
- from interference from nearby tracks and sectors. What other option do we have to store
- massive amount of data? We can use light. Light has its advantages. It is of a short
- wavelength, so we can place tracks very close together, and the size of the track we use is
- dependent only on one thing - the color of the light we use. An optical medium typically
- involves some sort of laser, for laser light does not diverge, so we can pinpoint it to a
- specific place on the disk. By moving the laser a little bit, we can change tracks on a
- disk, and this movement is very small, usually less than a hair╒s width. This allows one to
- store an immense amount of data on one disk. The light does not touch the disk surface,
- thereby not creating friction, which leads to wear, so the life of an average optical disk
- is far longer than that of a magnetic medium. Also, it is impossible to ╥crash╙ an optical
- disk (in the same sense as crashing a hard drive), since there is a protective layer
- covering the data areas, and that the ╥head╙ of the drive can be quite far away from the
- disk surface (a few millimeters compared to micrometers for a hard drive). If this medium
- is so superior, then why is it not standard equipment? It is. Most of the new computers
- have a CD-ROM drive that comes with it. Also, it is only recently that prices have come low
- enough to actually make them affordable. However, as the acronym states, one cannot write
- to a CD-ROM disk (unless one gets a CD-Recordable disk and drive). There are products
- however, that allows one to store and retrieve data on a optical medium. Some of those
- products are shown in table 1. However, the cost of this is quite high, so it doesn╒t
- usually make much sense for consumer use yet, unless one loves to transfers 20 megabyte
- pictures between friends. One will notice on the table that there are some items labled ╥MO╙
- or magnet-optical. This is a special type of drive and disk that get written by magnetic
- fields, and read by lasers. The disk itself is based on magnetism, that affects the
- reflective surface. Unlike floppy disks, to erase such a disk at room temperature requires
- a very strong magnetic field, much stronger than what ordinary disk erasers provide. To aid
- in writing to this MO disks, a high-power laser heats up part of the disk to about 150 oC
- (or the Curie temperature), which reduces the ability for the disk to withstand magnetic
- fields. Thus, the disk is ready to be rewritten. The disk needs to passes to change the
- bits though. The first pass ╥renews╙ the surface to what it was before it was used. The
- second pass writes the new data on. The magnetic fields then alters the crystal structure
- below it, thereby creating places in which the laser beam would not reflect to the
- photodetector. Another type of recordable medium, is the one-shot deal. The disk is shipped
- from the factory with nothing on it. As you go and use it, a high-power laser turns the
- transparent layer below the reflective layer opaque. The normal surface becomes the islands
- (on a normal CD) and the opaque surface the pits (pits on a normal CD do not reflect light
- back). These CDs, once recorded, cannot be re-recorded, unless saved in a special format
- that allows a new table of contents to be used. These CDs are the CD-Recordable, and the
- Photo CD. The Photo CD is in a format that allows one to have a new table of contents, that
- tell where the pictures are. It is this that distinguishes between ╥single-session╙ drives
- (drives that con only read photos recorded the first time the disk was used) and
- ╥multi-session╙ drives (that can read all the photos on a Photo CD). To read an optical
- medium, a low-power laser (one that cannot write to the disk) is aimed at the disk, and data
- is read back, by seeing if the laser light passes to the photodetector. The photodetector
- returns signals telling if there is or is not light bouncing back from the disk. To
- illustrate this process, see Figure 1. Optical data storage is the future of storage
- technology. However, it will take some time before prices are low enough for the general
- public. Applications get bigger, data files get bigger, games get bigger, etc. The humble
- floppy disk, with its tiny 1.44 megabyte (actually, 1.40 megabytes... since disk companies
- like to call 1 megabyte 1,024,000 bytes, when it is actually 1,048,576 bytes, or 220 bytes)
- capacity will be no match for the latest and greatest game, requiring 2+ gigabytes of space
- (and such games to exist now... in 4 CD-ROMs), the hard drive will reach its capacity, while
- the optical drives get smaller, faster, and cheaper. The speed of optical drives today is
- appalling to say the least. Also in the future would be hard drives based on optical
- technology, since nowadays a 51/4 inch disk can contain as much as 1 gigabytes of data.
- Optical drives, with their high-bit densities are in the near future...Sources Used:UMI -
- May 1992 BYTE MagazineTOM - June 1992 PC Magazine (64J2528)CD-ROMs - Grolier╒s
- multimediaPrinted - Various BYTE, ComputerCraft, MacUser and MacWorld magazinesInternet -
- Figure 1: http://www.byte.com/art\9502\img\411016E2.htm Table 1:
- http://www.byte.com/art\9502\img\411016Z2.htm
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