Technical
'Enhanced CD'
Production:
Enhanced CDs
utilize audio in session one (the disc will play on regular
players like cars, homes etc) and then a second session is added
which will play on personal computers (adds video, bios, web
links etc.) Enhanced CDs fall under the "CD-ROM"
banner. Please obtain a price quote using CDROM for your product
pricing.
Audio should be
recorded on session ONE and the Multi-media portion on session
TWO.
Mastering
Enhanced CD
Enhanced CD
utilizes a multi-session format, with the following disc
geography:
Session 1:
"Red Book" Audio
Session 2:
"Yellow Book" CDROM-XA, mode 2. The Extra/Blue Book
spec imposes a minimum file structure requirement within Session
2 in addition to any stand-alone multimedia applications.

Session 1:
Creating Audio
The audio section
of an Enhanced CD must be a "Disc At Once" session
that is unfinished to allow the second data session to be
written. Any of the premier audio mastering software like
SonicStudio or Sadie are now capable of writing unfinished audio
sessions. Even though the Enhanced CD audio initially gets
created within SonicStudio™, we prefer to have a professional
CD-R software like Adaptec's Jam write the unfinished
audio to CD-R. Sonic can generate an audio image file (actually
a SoundDesigner II file compatible with JAM) that
includes all tracking, subcode, and ISRC data.
Some audiophiles
and engineers may question the integrity and convenience of
converting the audio into a computer file format before writing
to CD. Bit for bit testing (see below) has proven that writing
an unfinished Red Book audio session using JAM
produces an identical copy of the Sonic master. The audio
image file can be conveniently archived or transferred to any
computer workstation without error or degradation.
Why Not To Use Digital Audio Extraction
We discourage the
practice of Digital Audio Extraction, which so many inexpensive
CD-R packages offer. This process captures the samples from an
audio CD-R played on a CD-ROM drive and writes them via the SCSI
bus to a computer audio file on a hard drive. Since you can't
monitor the copying process, it's more or less an act of faith.
While copying
computer files from a CD-ROM to a hard drive is generally a
straight-forward, error free process, digital audio extraction
is somewhat more daunting and less reliable. An audio CD has a
larger sector size (2,352 Bytes) than CD-ROM (2,048 Bytes) which
means the CPU has to work about 15% faster while also decoding
the audio data. Unlike CD-ROM sectors, CD audio sectors have no
headers, just Q Subcode information. When the laser searches the
Q Subcode to find its previous location, there can be an error
of +/- 5 CD frames! This must be compensated for by smart
copying software which performs 'overlap reads' by collecting
redundant audio samples and deleting the ones that have already
been written to the hard drive. For this reason, Digital Audio
Extraction is not a reliable linear process.
Aural
Verification
Regardless of the
method you use to write the audio of an Enhanced CD, you need to
be assured that the transfer process did not compromise the
audio. When comparing the source and copy programs aurally, be
sure to audition them through the same CD player or D/A.
This will minimize the varying jitter characteristics of
different digital audio media (CD, DAT, HD) and transfer
protocols (AES,SPDIF,Optical). Remember, a digital audio copy
pretends to be nothing more than a list of numbers with a
generic sampling rate. Regardless of all the hyped up
"anti-jitter" boxes and cables that exist in mastering
studios these days, the potential jitter characteristics of a
replicated CD come down to the final playback during glass
mastering.
Checking the
Audio Samples
There is a bit
for bit test you can perform on the source files and CD-R
session. Load both "before" and "after"
programs into a Sonic System with all input dither and DSP
disabled. Then synchronize the two programs to the audio sample.
Play all four channels through a stereo output mixer but with
one of the stereo programs out of phase. If the files are
identical, they cancel each other out. A Sony PCM-1630 video
screen confirms zero output with a black screen. This is
a must for Enhanced CD clients who are concerned about the
integrity of their audio on a dual session disc.
Session 2:
Enhanced CD
Once the first
round of audio premastering is finished, you're ready for round
two: adding the multimedia track. Hopefully you are spared the
agonies of authoring the multimedia, and the artist or developer
will let you know how much room is left for the Enhanced CD
track. Here's a simple formula:
10MB x Total
audio minutes minus 650MB = MB available for Session 2.
The multimedia
developer hopefully provides Enhanced CD data on one of several
currently popular storage formats (Zip, Jaz, CDR). Your job is
to successfully format and write this data after the audio to a
CD-R that the plant can successfully master. Most of the time,
the release is for both Mac and PC, so you may have to create a
Shared Hybrid session, which may consist of an HFS
directory and an ISO 9660 directory with common
files. Be vigilant about ISO 9660 naming restraints (8.3
characters) , since some may want their release to be compatible
with Windows 3.1. Create the Enhanced session in CDROM-XA
format or more specifically, CD-ROM Mode 2, Form 1. XA
stands for "extended architecture" and is a variant of
CD-ROM used for multi-session.
Take extra care
to make the Enhanced section functionally efficient and
appealing. This means defragmenting and optimizing the
files on the CD-R for optimum performance. It also means
enhancing the appearance of the project on the desktop: creating
custom icons for both Mac and PC, creating Auto Start
capability, and discreetly hiding or making invisible files and
folders that the end user need not directly access.
More information
on this subject can be seen from the public Apple
Developer PDF archives:
Enhanced CD Fact Book Guide for Consumers & Developers
Enhanced CD Survival Guide
Cross Platform Issues for Developers
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