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CDs Still a Long Way to Go
CDs Still a Long Way to Go
CDs – Still a Long Way to Go by James
Walsh
This immense hardware power of computers and other digital devices
such as laptops and palmtops is harnessed by an operating system.
It ensures that the phenomenal capability of the processors is
channelled toward executing real-world tasks according to the needs
of the user. For this, the operating system requires specialised
software programmes that are tailor-made to do different functions.
Computers generate a lot of data in their day-to-day work. This
data has to be stored somewhere. A variety of data storage devices
have been invented in the last couple of decades that can be used
with computers and other digital devices.
There are about a dozen different types of storage media available
in the market to suit every need. These are of two types –
removable and non-removable. Among the latter, the most prominent
are the hard drives that exist inside every computer. These are the
primary data storage devices and have huge capacities, with the
commonly available ones in the market today touching the 160 GB
mark. Nothing can come close to hard drives in terms of data access
and write speed, reliability and storage capacity and they
currently monopolise the non-removable data storage market.
Then there are the removable storage devices, such as USB drives,
flash memory cards, CDs, DVDs, portable hard disks, floppy disks
and so on. Their storage capacity varies from 1.4 MB of a floppy
drive to 240 GB of a portable hard disk. In recent years, due to
improvements in technology, the storage capacity and reliability of
portable storage media have increased exponentially.
The most popular and most widely used removable storage media is
the optical disks. These are a wonder of modern science and
engineering. They are an ideal solution to a typical computer
user’s data transport and archiving needs. Optical disks are
nothing but small circular disks made up of very tough plastic.
They store all their data on one side of their surface (the data
side) in a pattern of small microscopic pits. The pits are arranged
in a single groove that starts from the centre and goes around in
circles, radiating out toward the edges. This pattern of pits is
read by a laser that bounces off the surface (hence the name
“optical disks,” because the data is read by light and
not by a magnetic head).
The oldest and still mainstream optical disks are the compact
discs. When they were launched in 1982, they revolutionised the
portable data storage media market. It was just unbelievable how
such a small disk could hold up to 700 MB of data. Contrast this
with the most commonly available storage device then – the
floppy disk – that could hold a puny 1.4 MB of data.
CDs were quickly accepted by individuals and industries. Their fast
and wide popularity destroyed the floppy disk business and they
have now almost gone out of use. The biggest gainer was the
entertainment industry that soon made CDs the media of choice for
launching movies and music albums, which earlier used to come
loaded in magnetic-tape cartridges. All software today also comes
loaded on CDs. The introduction of rewritable CDs redoubled their
popularity as a flexible and high-capacity data storage tool. CDs
are currently ruling the portable storage market.
Recently, another version of optical disks called Digital Versatile
Disks (DVDs) has been launched. These are a huge improvement over
the CDs in terms of data capacity. They can hold a whopping 4.7 GB
of data. So, has the time come to bid goodbye to the good old and
trusted CDs?
The introduction of DVDs is a real threat to the monopoly of CDs in
the data storage market. However, CDs are quite cheap. They come at
only 1/7th the cost of a DVD. On top of this, CD writers are quite
inexpensive compared to DVD writers. DVDs still pale in comparison
to CDs in terms of popularity and wide usage. However, as the use
of DVDs spreads and they become as mainstream as CDs are today, the
cost of DVDs as well as the drive is bound to come down
drastically. This has already started happening.
It seems, for some time at least, CDs will coexist with DVDs. There
is a huge amount of data files whose size does not exceed a few
hundred MBs, such as anti-virus or data-recovery software. For
these, many would still prefer to go for CDs because of their low
cost, while the high-capacity data storage market will be totally
monopolised by the DVDs.
James Walsh is a freelance writer and copy editor. If you are
concerned about data loss and would like more information on
Data Recovery
see http://www.fields-data-recovery.co.uk
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