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  2. Ripping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripping

    Ripping is the extraction of digital content from a container, such as a CD, onto a new digital location. Originally, the term meant to rip music from Commodore 64 games. [citation needed] Later, the term was applied to ripping WAV or MP3 files from digital audio CDs, and after that to the extraction of contents from any storage media, including DVD and Blu-ray discs, as well as the extraction ...

  3. Magnetic storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_storage

    Hard drives use magnetic memory to store giga- and terabytes of data in computers. Information is written to and read from the storage medium as it moves past devices called read-and-write heads that operate very close (often tens of nanometers) over the magnetic surface. The read-and-write head is used to detect and modify the magnetisation of ...

  4. Optical disc authoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_disc_authoring

    Optical disc authoring, including CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Disc authoring, is the process of assembling source material—video, audio or other data—into the proper logical volume format to then be recorded ("burned") onto an optical disc (typically a compact disc or DVD).

  5. Magneto-optical drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magneto-optical_drive

    Early drives are 130 mm and have the size of full-height 130 mm hard-drives (like in the IBM PC XT). 130 mm media looks similar to a CD-ROM enclosed in an old-style caddy, while 90 mm media is about the size of a regular 3 1 ⁄ 2-inch floppy disk, but twice the thickness. The cases provide dust resistance, and the drives themselves have slots ...

  6. Parallel ATA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_ATA

    Parallel ATA (PATA), originally AT Attachment, also known as Integrated Drive Electronics (IDE), is a standard interface designed for IBM PC-compatible computers.It was first developed by Western Digital and Compaq in 1986 for compatible hard drives and CD or DVD drives.

  7. Optical disc recording technologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_disc_recording...

    Such media must be played in specially tuned drives, since the phase-change material has less of a contrast in reflectivity than dye-based media; while most modern drives support such media, many older CD drives cannot recognize the narrower threshold and cannot read such discs. Phase-change discs are designated with RW (ReWriteable) or RE ...

  8. SD card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SD_card

    The "×" rating, which was used by some card manufacturers and made obsolete by speed classes, is a multiple of the standard CD-ROM drive speed of 150 KB/s [g] (approximately 1.23 Mbit/s). Basic cards transfer data at up to six times (6×) the CD-ROM speed; that is, 900 kbit/s or 7.37 Mbit/s.

  9. Live CD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_CD

    CD-ROM of the LGX Yggdrasil Linux distribution release "Fall 1993" Although early developers and users of distributions built on top of the Linux kernel could take advantage of cheap optical disks and rapidly declining prices of CD drives for personal computers, the Linux distribution CDs or "distros" were generally treated as a collection of installation packages that would first need to be ...

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