by geckzilla » Tue Oct 23, 2007 12:54 pm
It wouldn't work, Dome. For one, say you have an old record... that groove is actually a big spiral. And if you look reeeeally close at one, you get this:
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/recordi ... gure5.html
CDs and DVDs I guess work in a similar way but they use pits... Here's a closeup of a CD along with an article:
http://www.stereophile.com/reference/590jitter/
You miiight perhaps be able to put it on a record but for sure you would get nothing out of a CD or DVD. Data has to be organized. You can't just randomly plop some pits on a DVD or CD and hope something comes out. The bits have to be arranged to form bytes and those bytes have to correspond to something. You have to know where the start and end of each file is by using a special area of the disc to tell it where those are.
bystander: if you look at the closeup, you'll see that they are occluding it. They're pretty translucent. It's just easier to see them against the black of space.
It wouldn't work, Dome. For one, say you have an old record... that groove is actually a big spiral. And if you look reeeeally close at one, you get this:
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/recording/images4/figure5.html
CDs and DVDs I guess work in a similar way but they use pits... Here's a closeup of a CD along with an article:
http://www.stereophile.com/reference/590jitter/
You miiight perhaps be able to put it on a record but for sure you would get nothing out of a CD or DVD. Data has to be organized. You can't just randomly plop some pits on a DVD or CD and hope something comes out. The bits have to be arranged to form bytes and those bytes have to correspond to something. You have to know where the start and end of each file is by using a special area of the disc to tell it where those are.
bystander: if you look at the closeup, you'll see that they are occluding it. They're pretty translucent. It's just easier to see them against the black of space.