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Showing posts with label Write about CD-ROM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Write about CD-ROM. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2019

What is CD-ROM and the Multimedia Highway?

Multimedia require large amount t of digital memory when stores in an end users library, or large amounts of bandwidth when distributed over wires, glass Fiber, or airwaves on network. The greater the bandwidth, the bigger the "pipeline", so more content can be delivered to end users quickly.



CD-ROM, DVD and Multimedia:
       CD-ROM (compact disc read-only memory, has become the most cost-effective distribution medium for multimedia projects: a CD-ROM disc can be mass-produced for pennies and can contain up to 80 minutes of full-screen video or sound. Or it can come rain unique mixes of images, sound, text, video and animations controlled by an authoring system to provide ultimates user interaction.

       Discs can be stamped out of poly-carbonate plastic as fast as cookies on a baker's production line and just as cheaply. Virtually all personal computers sold today include a least a CD-ROM player, and the software that drives these computers is commonly available on a CD-ROM disc applications that required inserting as many as 16 or more floppy disk one after another are now installed from a CD-ROM without muss or fuss.



       Many systems now come with a DVD-ROM player, Multilayered Digital Versatile Disk (DVD) technology increases the capacity and multimedia capability or current optical technology to 18 GB. CD and DVD burners are used for reading discs and for making them, too, in audio, video, and data formats. DVD authoring and integration software allows the creation of interactive front-end menus for films and games.

       In the very long term, however, CD-ROM and DVD discs are but interim memory technologies that will be replaced by new devices that do not require moving parts. As the data highway described below becomes more and more pervasive and users become better "connected", copper wire, glass Fiber, and radio/cellular technologies may prevail as the most common delivery means for interactive multimedia files, served across the broadband internet or from dedicated computer farms and storage facilities.

The Multimedia Highway:

       Now, that telecommunications networks are global, and when information provides and content owners determines the worth of theirs products and how to charge money for them, information elements will ultimately link up online's as distributed resources on a data highway (actually more like a toll road). Where you will pay to acquire and use multimedia-based information.

       Curiously, the actual glass Fiber cables that makes up much of the physical backbone of the data highway are, in many cases. Owned by railroad and pipelines companies who simply buried the cables on existing rights of way where no special permits and environmental reports are necessary. One railroad in the United States invested more than a million dollars in a special cable laying trenching car; in the United Kingdom, there is talk of placing a fiber-optic  cables backbone along the decaying 19th century canal and barge system. Bandwidth on these lines is leased to other, so competing retailers such as AT&T, MCI, and Sprint may even share the same cable. Full-text content from books and magazines is accessible by modem and electronic link; features movies are played at home; real-time new reports from anywhere on earth are available; lectures from participating universities are monitored for education credits; street maps of any city are view-able with recommendations for restaurants, in any language-and online travelogues include testimonials and video tracks. This is not science fiction; it is happing now. For each of these interfaces or gateways to information is a Multimedia projects just waiting to be developed.



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