650 or 700 megabytes depending on the design of the disc.
CDs were invented by Sony in the year 1978 but took a long time to go mainstream due to the public's unwillingness to accept a type of media that could not be recorded over or copied. The record industry, of course, loved it.
So ... standard CDs are 5¼" in diameter. The best way to hold data on one of them would be to place it horizontally on something big and flat like a table. Then you want to stack high capacity media on top ... I'm going to pick Blu-Ray disks because they are the same size.
The question now becomes, "How many Blu-Ray disks can I stack on top of a standard CD before the tower topples over."
Without knowing the manufacturing tolerances, I don't think we can answer this question exactly. My estimate (I'm going for partial credit now ...) is between 1,000 and 10,000 disks at 50 GB per disk (I'm assuming no wind or earthquakes).
Somewhere around 700 meg.
ReplyDelete700 megabytes
ReplyDelete650 or 700 megabytes depending on the design of the disc.
ReplyDeleteCDs were invented by Sony in the year 1978 but took a long time to go mainstream due to the public's unwillingness to accept a type of media that could not be recorded over or copied. The record industry, of course, loved it.
700mb.
ReplyDeleteDVDs hold 4.7GB. Dual layer DVDs are twice that. Blu-Ray is 25GB single layer, 50GB dual layer.
Zip drives are 100mb, Floppies were most commonly 1.44mb.
I can keep going, but I've got to leave you some trivia questions, don't I?
That all depends if you allow or don't allow data compression to be used on the data first.
ReplyDeleteI think they advertise them as 700 MB, but actual storage is a few megabytes more, like two or three megabytes more.
ReplyDelete800MB.
ReplyDeleteI thought it was 550 MB...ish.
ReplyDelete"How much data will a standard CD hold?"
ReplyDeleteOooh ... this sounds like a word problem.
So ... standard CDs are 5¼" in diameter. The best way to hold data on one of them would be to place it horizontally on something big and flat like a table. Then you want to stack high capacity media on top ... I'm going to pick Blu-Ray disks because they are the same size.
The question now becomes, "How many Blu-Ray disks can I stack on top of a standard CD before the tower topples over."
Without knowing the manufacturing tolerances, I don't think we can answer this question exactly. My estimate (I'm going for partial credit now ...) is between 1,000 and 10,000 disks at 50 GB per disk (I'm assuming no wind or earthquakes).
So ... 50-500 TB.
-Mark Roulo
Mark, give yourself some extra credit for entertaining me!
ReplyDeleteEric, go play outside more :-)