Difference between revisions of "Disc"

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In the [[23rd century]], [[disc]]s look like obvious descendants of CD-Rom and DVD-Rom technology, a pretty accurate observation.  Most readers, for [[computer]]s, [[braincase]]s, and [[droid]]s, use 8-centimeter wide platters that are rougly 2 millimeters in thickness.  As with the technology they developed from, they are available in both 'permanent', 'burnable', and read-writable versions.
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In the [[Solar Storms]], [[disc]]s look like obvious descendants of CD-Rom and DVD-Rom technology, a pretty accurate observation.  Most readers, for [[computer]]s, [[braincase]]s, and [[droid]]s, use 8-centimeter wide platters that are roughly two millimeters in thickness.  As with the technology they developed from, they are available in both 'permanent', 'burnable', and read-writable versions.
  
The amount of data they can store is measured in the petabyte to exabyte range, and typically store something absurd like every notable song ever recorded, all videos in a genre, or the collective understanding and supporting data for a single subject matter.
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The amount of data they can store is measured in the yobibyte range, depending on model and desired durability. They typically store something absurd like every notable song ever recorded, all videos in a genre, or the collective understanding and supporting data for a single subject matter.
  
 
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Latest revision as of 00:14, 21 April 2007

In the Solar Storms, discs look like obvious descendants of CD-Rom and DVD-Rom technology, a pretty accurate observation. Most readers, for computers, braincases, and droids, use 8-centimeter wide platters that are roughly two millimeters in thickness. As with the technology they developed from, they are available in both 'permanent', 'burnable', and read-writable versions.

The amount of data they can store is measured in the yobibyte range, depending on model and desired durability. They typically store something absurd like every notable song ever recorded, all videos in a genre, or the collective understanding and supporting data for a single subject matter.


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