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A Guide to PC Hardware Maintenance and Repair

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Compact Disk Digital Audio (CDDA) Used by the recording industry to record music CDs ... Compact Disk File System. Used for storing digital data. CDDA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Guide to PC Hardware Maintenance and Repair


1
Chapter 16 Multimedia Computerized Home
Entertainment
2
Objectives
  • To see how optical drives store and retrieve data
  • To learn about a couple of new file systems used
    by optical media
  • To look at various types of optical disks
  • To see what make a sound card do what it does

3
The Components of Multimedia
  • An optical drive
  • The CD Family
  • The DVD Family
  • Sound cards and Speakers

4
The Introduction of the CD
  • First developed as an audio device
  • Introduced to computers to store large amounts of
    data
  • Driven primarily by the gaming market

5
Understanding CD Speed Ratings
  • The first computer CD released by Philips was
    capable of 150Kb/s throughput
  • When Sony developed a drive capable of 300Kb/s
    they advertised it as the 2x CD-ROM
  • The naming pattern stuck

6
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7
How the CD Works (some terms)
  • Pits
  • Lands
  • Optical Stylus
  • Photoelectric Cell (PEC)
  • Servo
  • Digital Analog Converter (DAC)

8
Pits and Lands
  • Data is encoded onto the surface of a
    conventional CD by etching holes into the surface
    of an aluminum layer
  • The holes are called pits all unmarked aluminum
    is land
  • Pits are laid out in tracks, just like on a hard
    disk

9
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10
The Optical Stylus
  • Named after the old playback needle on a
    turntable of yesteryear. (Dad? Whats a
    turntable?)
  • Shines a 780 nanometer infrared laser, split into
    three beams, onto surface of CD
  • Land reflects laser back pits dont

11
Photoelectric Cell
  • As the laser beam crosses the pits and lands the
    lands, intersected by pits results in a reflected
    beam of pulsating light
  • The photoelectric cell converts the light to
    electrical energy
  • The pulses of energy are the encoded data

12
The Servo Motor
  • To read the data accurately, the stylus must stay
    on the track
  • On either side of each track is a 1.6 nanometer
    strip of land
  • The center beam of the stylus is supposed reflect
    a pulsating beam. The two on the outside are not
  • If either outside beam pulsates, the servo motor
    repositions the stylus back on track

13
The DAC
  • The pulsating electrical current passes onto the
    DAC where it is converted into an analog data
    stream
  • The analog signal is then transmitted to the
    device requesting the data

14
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15
Optical File Formats
  • Compact Disk Digital Audio (CDDA)
  • Used by the recording industry to record music
    CDs
  • Used in mixed format CDs that hold both music and
    digital data
  • Compact Disk File System
  • Used for storing digital data

16
CDDA
  • An analog signal is fed into a device that takes
    digital samples and converts the sample into a
    16-bit stream of data (chop)
  • The industry standard for sample rate is 44,100
  • 147 chops are stored in a 2,353-bit sector
  • Data throughput for an audio CD is 176,400 Kb/s

17
CDFS
  • Audio files dont care if a bit or two is lost in
    conversion, but data files do
  • 352 bits of the CDDA sector are set aside for
  • 48 bits for Error Detection Code
  • 302 bits as Synchronization bits
  • This leaves a 2,000 bit sector for data

18
CD Data Access Methods
  • CLV
  • CAV
  • Hybrid

19
CLV
  • Constant Linear Velocity
  • Since there are more sectors in the outside
    tracks than on the inside, data transfer rates
    increase as the stylus moves to the center of the
    disk
  • CLV adjusted motor speed to change the rotational
    speed of the disk as the stylus moves towards
    center

20
CAV
  • Constant Angular Velocity
  • Rotational speed of the disk remains constant
  • The drive electronics adjust to the higher data
    throughput as the stylus moves to center
  • CAV drives advertise speeds like 24/48x

21
Hybrid drives
  • Employ CAV for the out 1/3 of the disk
  • Employ CLV for the inner 2/3 of the disk

22
CD Loading Mechanisms
  • Tray
  • Inexpensive, but prone to breaking
  • Caddy
  • Expensive, but protects the disk better
  • Slot
  • Cheap and easy to use, but can play havoc on the
    CD

23
The Descendants of CD
  • CDR
  • CD-RW
  • DVD
  • Various Recordable DVD formats

24
CDR
  • CD Recordable
  • Uses pthalocyanine dye instead of aluminum for a
    substrate
  • Two-power laser
  • High-power beam burns pits into dye during record
    process
  • Low-power beam is used for playback

25
CD-RW
  • CD Rewriteable
  • Recording surface is an allow of silver,
    antimony, tellurium and indium
  • Are you SURE you want to be throwing these into
    the city dump???
  • At medium heat, the alloy melts, at high heat it
    crystallizes
  • Three-power laser
  • Low power for playback, high power to record and
    medium power to erase

26
Digital Video Disk (DVD)
  • Twice as many tracks and twice as many sectors
    per track as a CD
  • Up to two recording layers can be placed on
    either side of DVD
  • Double-sided DVDs separate recording layers with
    a microscopically thin layer of gold

27
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28
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29
Sound Cards
  • Convert analog sound to digital signals and vice
    versa
  • A chip called an Analog/Digital Converter (ADC)
    converts sound waves to digital format
  • A typical DAC coverts digital audio to analog
  • Sound cards generally have 2 to 4 1/8 audio
    jacks and a 15-pin MIDI connector

30
The Electronics of the Sound Card
  • An old sound card had enough chips to supply six
    guys watching the Super Bowl
  • Inexpensive sound cards of today have a single
    Digital Signal Processor (DSP) that performs all
    the functions
  • Better sound cards employ additional processors
    to add surround sound and digital effects

31
The Old Days of Sound Cards
  • Early sound cards depended on IRQ5 and I/O
    address 0220h to function
  • As newer sound cards emerged they took other
    resources, but kept IRQ5 and 0220h for Legacy
    compatibility

32
Sound Cards and DMA
  • Sound cards are one of the devices that require a
    DMA channel
  • If a sound card is installed before or after a
    parallel port is configured to use ACP (see the
    chapter on printers), it may not work, even
    though all else looks good
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