Add wiki reference to the Philips Red Book.
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@@ -37,11 +37,13 @@ Compact Disc
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@item CD-DA
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@cindex CD-DA
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Compact Disc Digital Audio, described in the ``Red Book'' or ICE
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Compact Disc Digital Audio, described in the ``Red Book'' or IEC
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908. This commonly referred to as an audio @acronym{CD} and what most
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people think of when you play a @acronym{CD} as it was the first to
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use the @acronym{CD} medium.
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See @url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_(audio_CD_standard)}
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@item CD+G
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@cindex CD+G
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@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ development.''
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@titlepage
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@title GNU libcdio library
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@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.51 2006/04/16 02:34:08 rocky Exp $
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@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.52 2007/12/10 09:01:08 rocky Exp $
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@author Rocky Bernstein et al.
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@page
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@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ to by the color of the cover on the specification.
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The first type of CD that was produced was the Compact Disc Digital
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Audio (CD-DA) or just plain ``audio CD''. The specification, ICE 908,
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is commonly called the ``Red Book''. Music CD's are recorded in this
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is commonly called the ``Red Book'', @cite{@url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_(audio_CD_standard)}}. Music CD's are recorded in this
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format which basically allows for around 74 minutes of audio per disc
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and for that information to be split up into tracks. Tracks are broken
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up into "sectors" and each sector contains up to 2,352 bytes. To play
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