Hardware for Multimedia
Memory and Storage Devices
Need of memory
• To estimate the memory requirements of a
multimedia project—the space required on a
hard disk, thumb drive, CD-ROM, or DVD, not
the random access memory (RAM) used while
your computer is running—you must have a
sense of the project’s content and scope.
• Color images, text, sound bites, video clips,
and the programming code that glues it all
together require memory
Various Memory Needs
• If you are making multimedia, you will also
need to allocate memory for:
– storing and archiving working files used during
production,
– original audio and video clips,
– edited pieces, and final mixed pieces,
– production paperwork and correspondence,
– and at least one backup of your project files,
– with a second backup stored at another location.
Random Access Memory (RAM)
• It is profoundly frustrating to face memory (RAM) shortages
time after time, when you’re attempting to keep multiple
applications and files open simultaneously.
• In spite of all the marketing hype about processor speed, this
speed is ineffective if not accompanied by sufficient RAM.
• A fast processor without enough RAM may waste processor
cycles while it swaps needed portions of program code into
and out of memory.
• In some cases, increasing available RAM may show more
performance improvement on your system than upgrading
the processor chip
Read-Only Memory (ROM)
• Unlike RAM, read-only memory (ROM) is not
volatile.
• When you turn off the power to a ROM chip, it
will not forget, or lose its memory.
• ROM is typically used in computers to hold the
small BIOS program that initially boots up the
computer.
• Programmable ROMs (called EPROMs) allow
changes to be made that are not forgotten when
power is turned off.
Hard Disks
• Adequate storage space for your production
environment can be provided by large-
capacity hard disks.
• As multimedia has reached consumer
desktops, makers of hard disks have built
smaller-profile, larger-capacity, faster, and
less-expensive hard disks.
Hard Disks
• As network and Internet servers drive the
demand for centralized data storage requiring
terabytes (one trillion bytes), hard disks are
often configured into fail-proof redundant
arrays offering built-in protection against
crashes.
Flash Memory or Thumb Drives
• These devices can be integrated with USB or
FireWire interfaces to store from eight
megabytes to several GB of data.
• They are available in every color of the
rainbow, are extremely portable, and, because
they have fewer moving parts, are more
reliable than disk drives.
Flash Memory or Thumb Drives
• Consisting of a small printed circuit board
encased in a sturdy metal or plastic casing
with a USB connector covered with a cap, the
flash drive is trendy as a status symbol, and
convenient to use.
• This same solid-state storage is used in digital
cameras, cell phones, and audio recording
devices, and for solid state hard drives that
are found in handheld devices.
CD-ROM Discs
• Have become an integral part of multimedia
development workstation and are important
delivery vehicle for mass-produced projects.
• A wide variety of developer utilities, graphic
backgrounds, stock photography and sounds,
applications, games, reference texts, and
educational software are available on this
medium.
CD-ROM Discs
• CD-ROM players have typically been very slow
to access and transmit data (150 KBps, which
is the speed required of consumer Audio CDs)
• With a compact disc recorder, you can make
your own CDs.
CD-ROM Discs
• CD-R discs are manufactured differently than
normal CDs but can play in any CD-Audio or
CD-ROM player.
• Because they are very inexpensive, they are
also used for short-run distribution of finished
multimedia projects and data backup.
Digital Versatile Discs (DVD)
• With a DVD capable not only of gigabyte
storage capacity but also
– full-motion video (MPEG2) and high-quality audio
in surround sound,
– this is an excellent medium for delivery of
multimedia projects.
Digital Versatile Discs (DVD)
• There are three types of DVD, including
– DVD-Read Write,
– DVD-Video,
– And DVD-ROM.
Blu-ray Discs
• Driven by the implementation of High Definition TV
(HDTV) and by the motion picture industry, a new
technology was needed to increase storage capacity
and throughput beyond DVD.
• Two competing and incompatible solutions were
promoted:HD-DVD, backed by Toshiba, and Blu-ray,
backed by Sony.
• Blu-ray is promoted not only for high definition
television recording and high definition video
distribution, but also for high definition camcorder
archiving, mass data storage and digital asset
management