In digital recording, the analog signal of a motion-picture/sound is converted into a stream of discrete numbers, representing the changes in air pressure (chroma and luminance values in case of video) through time; thus making an abstract template for the original sound or moving image.
Playback
Techniques to record to commercial media
For digital cassettes, the read/write head moves as well as the tape in order to maintain a high enough speed to keep the bits at a manageable size.
For CDs or DVDs, a laser is used to burn microscopic holes into the dye layer of the medium. A weaker laser is used to read these signals. This works because the metallic substrate of the disc is reflective, and the unburned dye prevents reflection while the holes in the dye permit it, allowing digital data to be represented.
Also if the sample rate is exactly the same as the sound's frequency, it would take its number from the same point on every wave every time, causing the output wave to be shaped in a perfectly straight line. Sample rates of exactly twice the frequency have this same problem, just skipping a wave in the process. To prevent this problem, the Shannon-Nyquist sampling theorem was developed (or, more simply, Nyquist's rate, which is double the sound's frequency as the lowest possible sample rate.)
One of the great advantages of digital recording over analog recording is its resistance to errors. Since these bits are physically extremely small, some are bound to be damaged during the process of recording or using them. With analog recording techniques, any amount of damage is irreversable. As you use it, the increasing damage causes the noise to get worse and worse.
With digital recording techniques, small amounts of damage are completely irrelevant. When a crisp bump meant to represent a "1" gets a small notch knocked off or becomes worn, it's still very easy to distinguish it from a "0". Even when one particualar "1" bump is so well worn that it becomes indistinguishable from a "0", there are error correction schemes that can detect the lost information and to fix it. Here are some techniques used to avoid losing any data even when particular bits are completely destroyed.
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It uses material from the
"Digital recording".
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