Phase-change Dual
Phase-change Dual (or Phase-change Disc) is a rewritable optical disc and its standard developed by Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. , Ltd. in April 1995.
Media type | Optical disk |
---|---|
Encoding | Digital signal |
Usage | Data storage |
It has a capacity of 650 MB on one side, and the size of the disc is 12 cm in diameter (5 inches) similar to a general CD or DVD, and it is used in a state where it is housed in a square cartridge. The phase change recording technology using red laser light is adopted, and about 500,000 times of rewriting is possible.
The built-in PD drive and the external type are sold, respectively, and both of them can read the CD-ROM . Both drive and media, most of which are manufactured by Matsushita Electric Appliances only, the company also released a notebook PC with a 650 MB auxiliary storage device and a 4× CD-ROM drive, a PRONOTE PD (August 1996).
CD-RW can be cited as a re-writable medium at the same time, but it is characterized by being able to write and delete on a file basis, which is close to the feeling of handling CD-RW and floppy disk using packet write system. Also, due to the characteristics contained in the cartridge, it does not touch the recording surface directly, so it is resistant to dust and scratches and is relatively reliable. CD-R and CD-RW were not so popular at the time, and there were instabilities such as many write failures. Although the writing speed of PD is not fast, it is about to be faster than writing to floppy, but at the time of sale it was not a speed that made it so difficult.
Meanwhile, MO , ZIP drive, etc. existed as re-writable media close to the feeling of handling floppy disks , but the advantage that the PD drive can be read by the CD-ROM was merit compared with those. At that time the CD-ROM drive was becoming an essential peripheral device, but it was not necessarily built in every PC yet, desktop machines which were mainstream at that time had many models with only one drive bay . In such an environment, a PD capable of serving as both a CD-ROM drive and a large capacity (then) auxiliary storage device was advantageous both in terms of cost and installation.
In general, it was also excellent compared with other optical media of the same period. However, there were also few entry makers, so it was hard to say that they were more popular than MO and ZIP. Later, PD drives capable of making CD-Rs were also released (Multi-CD-R · PD-R), but only partial spread.
DVD-RAM appeared as a successor technology in April 1997, DVD-RAM adopts a cartridge similar to PD, and the 2.6 GB version 1.0 standard, which has just one side capacity equal to 4 times the PD, DVD - It was possible to read and write PD in the RAM drive. However, in the summer of 2000, compatibility with PD was not taken into consideration when the DVD-RAM of the new version 4.7 GB version 2.0 standard, which has the same capacity as other DVDs, appeared, at this point Following the fate to disappear from the market.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to PD. |