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CD-ROM  CD-ROM Logo

The CD-ROM was developed from the audio CD shortly after its introduction. The data on a CD-ROM is organized much like a magnetic disk. However, since a CD-ROM cannot be written to, there is no need for a mechanism to track which sectors belong to which file; the sectors of any particular file are sequential on the disk and never change. Therefore, the CD-ROM has its own file system called CDFS (Compact Disk File System).

Early CD-ROMs could hold 650 MiB of data or 74 minutes of media[1] (audio or video). Modern disks hold 700 MiB of data or 80 minutes of media. The disks could hold more bytes of media than other data because media doesn't require error protection.

Early CD-ROMs were advertised as capable of holding the entire Encyclopedia Britannica, including pictures on one disk.

CD-ROM vs. Encyclopedia
A CD-ROM with an entire paper encyclopedia which it holds

Green markers for CD edges

Some people believe that marking the edge of a CD with a green marker, especially one made for this purpose, improves the sound quality of audio CDs. If you believe this, please contact me as I can make you a great deal on shares of the Brooklyn Bridge.  

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1Bytes of data and media capacity didn't correspond to the same number of bytes of memory. They were two different specifications.
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