more from the 'Kurt Hamster school' of uk.rec.audio-ism
On Sat, 30 Aug 2003 23:58:17 +0000 (UTC), Jim H used
to say...
Why can I read data cds without error, but not audio ones?
Data CDs are *not* the same as Audio CDs.
Data CDs have error checking bits, audio CDs don't.
Thanks for only seeing this one question.
Why can I store slightly more music in PCM format at CD quality on a data
cd than a redbook one, I always guessed this was because data cds have less
error protection bits, which cancels out the overhead of file allocation.
Eitherway, when I read data CDs to a iso image file in cloneCD I am doing
an exact copy, reading the error correction stuff as if it were data, and
doing no processing with it. The data is still perfect, just like it is for
audio cds.
Questions I'd still like answered:
Is it possible to create a CDP that reads without injecting errors into the
bitstream?
Has one yet been created?
Why can I read data cds without error, but not audio ones?
Why can we not read CDs without error 20 years after the standard was
created?
Shouldn't digital errors cause gaps in the music
or nothing, not subtle tonal changes?
--
Jim H
3.1415...4999999 and so on... Richard Feynman