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Exposure to Computer Disciplines



                   Notes         2.3.2.4 Optical Disk
                                 With every new application and software there is greater demand for memory capacity. It is the
                                 necessity to store large volume of data that has led to the development of optical disk storage
                                 medium. Optical disks read and write the data using light and not the magnetization as in above
                                 storage devices. Optical disks can be divided into the following categories:
                                   1.  Compact Disk/Read Only Memory (CD-ROM): CD-ROM disks are made of reflective
                                      metals. CD-ROM is written during the process of manufacturing by high power laser
                                      beam.
                                       Here the storage density is very high, storage cost is very low and access time is relatively
                                      fast. Each disk is approximately 4 ½ inches in diameter and can have over 600 MB of
                                      data. As the CD-ROM can be read only we cannot write or make changes into the data
                                      contained in it.
                                    2.  Write Once, Read Many (WORM): The inconvenience that we cannot write anything onto
                                      a CD-ROM is avoided in WORM. A WORM allows the user to write data permanently on
                                      to the disk. Once the data is written it can never be erased without physically damaging the
                                      disk. Here data can be recorded from keyboard, video scanner, OCR equipment and other
                                      devices. The advantage of WORM is that it can store vast amount of data amounting
                                      to gigabytes (10’ bytes). Any document in a WORM can be accessed very fast, say less
                                      than 30 seconds.
                                    3.  Erasable Optical Disk: These are optical disks where data can be written, erased and
                                      re-written. This makes use of a laser beam to write and re-write the data. These disks
                                      may be used as alternatives to traditional disks. Erasable optical disks are based on a
                                      technology known as magneto-optico (MO). To write a data bit on to the erasable optical
                                      disk the MO drive’s laser beam heats a tiny, precisely defined point on the disk’s surface
                                      and magnetises it.

                                                              Figure 2.9: Optical Disk























                                    Storage      Speed          Capacity         Relative Cost ($)   Permanent?
                                    Registers    Fastest        Lowest           Highest          No
                                    RAM          Very Fast      Low/Moderate     High             No
                                    Floppy Disk   Very Slow     Low              Low              Yes
                                    Hard Disk    Moderate       Very High        Very Low         Yes






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