• null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Oh man.

    12 year old me waiting for hours to rip mp3s from cds always wondered about this.

    Like why isn’t it already compressed?

    The answer is that storage was available but processing wasn’t. Amaze.

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Mp3 is already compressed, as is the MP2 CDs use.

      If it wasn’t conpressed, you’d be looking at CDs per track, instead of tracks per CD.

      • deltapi@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        What are you on about? CD-DA, aka audio CD, aka red book audio, is uncompressed 16-bit PCM sampled at 44100Hz. It is lossless.

        MP3 (MPEG-1/2 Audio Layer III) is a lossy encoding standard commonly used for online audio distribution and steaming. MP2 usually refers to MPEG-1 Audio Layer 2, which was most commonly used in Digital Audio Broadcast.

        Neither are used in ‘regular’ CD audio.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            5 days ago

            The round hole in the middle of the cassette near the tape path is designed to have a light bulb on a stick inserted into it.

            Most of the tape is (approximately) opaque due to the magnetic recording media, but the very ends are transparent. If you open the cassette’s lid and look at the uncovered ends of the cassette, you’ll see a hole on each end that has a path through the cartridge to the light bulb hole, only interrupted by the tape itself. Photoreceptors in the VCR sit just outside those holes, and if light is detected it means that the clear leader is starting to unwind from the spool meaning the tape is over, so this is how the VCR knows to stop the tape. This is why so many VCRs and rewinders glow inside.

            Later hardware swapped it for an infrared LED and detectors but still did the job optically.