iamaboringperson wrote:
BTW, the problem I have with the term 'CD-ROM' is that since CD's were released, THEY HAVE ALWAYS BEEN READ ONLY. Why append -ROM to CD? There is actually little difference.
'Read Only' is redundant!
ROM has always stood for Read Only Memory. When 'CD-ROM' was first used, the ROM part stood for Read Only Memory.
The -ROM part was apparently the idea of some marketing guru who had very limited computer knowledge, and was only used in one country for a while and then it spread world-wide.
I say 'CD', it's so much easier!
Well, the words "Compact Disc" themselves don't say much beyond "disc, relatively not-big." "CD-ROM" is defined by a separate set of standards (Yellow Book) from CDDA (Red Book), and a redbook CD is poorly suited to acting as a data ROM because "-DA" didn't actually have to worry about bit-accuracy (more like probabilistic accuracy).* So they did have to define some sort of new standard to, er, standardly use the medium defined in the Red Book for data... and since that standard
was designed to allow CDs to function as bit-accurate Read-Only Memory, it deserves the name.
With Phillips as the arbiter of all things "CD," it's little different than Sony branding "MD Data." A little redundant, but their prerogative, and without such specs
there were no specs for using either medium for bit-accurate 'read-only' operations. (In other words, whence previously you had 'recordings,' you could say the data specs raise the bar to 'memory' levels of tolerance. Even the 'recording' technology probably performed a hell of a lot better than old drum memory, see below.)**
You're perfectly welcome to call it a "CD," you're just not being specific. ;-) Phillips left the semantic door open wide enough to be able to release a "CD-Analogue" or "CD-Random Noise Generator" if they ever had the need, which was actually sort of smart. (It was the '80s, after all- who could've foreseen the SmartMedia-to-floppy adapters, and on the same token, who would've predicted that there
wouldn't possibly be something similar in the optical domain? They were just out to create a shiny improvement on the LP, when they started...)
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*Of course, you *can* use a redbook CD with alternate error correction/error tolerance technologies; hipsters today are backing up old Atari and Commodore tapes to Red Book CDDA, and the noise tolerance to those low-bitrate encodings lets them function as well as they did from the original media; similarly, there are a couple ways to add error correction to the bitstream on the disk itself, and since Yellow Book was to some extent cobbled-up "after the fact," there are a few competing ways of doing it allowed. You could come up with your own incompatible method, but then it wouldn't be a "CD-ROM." :-o
**Actually, for all I know, bit-accurate duplication was part of the original MD spec, at least. But barring the 'official' designations, neither Phillips or Sony would've given you any sort of
guarantee on the sanctity of their designs for data operations. Semantic wanking, but also what counts; you can't use something that "doesn't exist," though in turn I do think Yellow Book "took back" under Phillips' mantle a number of hacks that worked fine before anyone thought to worry.
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Now if you want to point out things-pathetic, it's disappointing to see Sony coming up with BS like "NetMD" after killing and burying the first "MD Data" spec. Not only can they not manage to pretend things are somehow related or compatible (and they're not; they screwed up too badly at first), but the new branding doesn't even have anything to do with
anything; it's as if Chrysler/GM/whoever were to start marketing a "fission car" because they think their latest 4-cylinder is just that good. :destroy: