DVD-like optical disc could store 1.6 petabits (or 200 terabytes) on 100 layersWilshire@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 380 points – 4 months agotechspot.com76Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentDoes the 'original speed' mean what the natural playback would have been? So 60 minutes of audio burned by a x60 drive would take one minute?Yes, but I think there was some overhead in the process that was slower.Memory limitations. Back then RAM was like 512 maxYou are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.
Does the 'original speed' mean what the natural playback would have been? So 60 minutes of audio burned by a x60 drive would take one minute?Yes, but I think there was some overhead in the process that was slower.Memory limitations. Back then RAM was like 512 maxYou are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.
Yes, but I think there was some overhead in the process that was slower.Memory limitations. Back then RAM was like 512 maxYou are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.
Memory limitations. Back then RAM was like 512 maxYou are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.
You are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.
Does the 'original speed' mean what the natural playback would have been? So 60 minutes of audio burned by a x60 drive would take one minute?
Yes, but I think there was some overhead in the process that was slower.
Memory limitations. Back then RAM was like 512 max
You are correct. However, I mean initialization and finalizing.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-R Looks like a 52x wrote at 7.8 MB/s. Things have changed.