Add wiki reference to the Philips Red Book.

This commit is contained in:
rocky
2007-12-10 09:01:08 +00:00
parent 8e48c0ad7f
commit 8ab252d508
2 changed files with 5 additions and 3 deletions

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@@ -37,11 +37,13 @@ Compact Disc
@item CD-DA
@cindex CD-DA
Compact Disc Digital Audio, described in the ``Red Book'' or ICE
Compact Disc Digital Audio, described in the ``Red Book'' or IEC
908. This commonly referred to as an audio @acronym{CD} and what most
people think of when you play a @acronym{CD} as it was the first to
use the @acronym{CD} medium.
See @url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_(audio_CD_standard)}
@item CD+G
@cindex CD+G

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@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ development.''
@titlepage
@title GNU libcdio library
@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.51 2006/04/16 02:34:08 rocky Exp $
@subtitle $Id: libcdio.texi,v 1.52 2007/12/10 09:01:08 rocky Exp $
@author Rocky Bernstein et al.
@page
@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ to by the color of the cover on the specification.
The first type of CD that was produced was the Compact Disc Digital
Audio (CD-DA) or just plain ``audio CD''. The specification, ICE 908,
is commonly called the ``Red Book''. Music CD's are recorded in this
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
format which basically allows for around 74 minutes of audio per disc
and for that information to be split up into tracks. Tracks are broken
up into "sectors" and each sector contains up to 2,352 bytes. To play