Nero neronet 사용자 설명서

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Quickstart NeroNET 
Glossar  
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15 Glossar 
Buffer underrun 
The successful burning of a disc calls for a continuous flow of data from the 
computer to the recorder, and that from the start of the recording process (lead-
in) to the end (lead-out). If the recorder is burning too quickly and/or the data 
stream from the computer to the recorder is too slow, this will result in the cache 
memory in the recorder being emptied and the recording process coming to a halt 
as no more data will be available.  
CD-Text 
As well as audio data, there is space on the CD for a wide variety of additional 
information, such as text describing the title and artist on each track. Currently 
very few audio CD players have a CD text function. If an audio CD player does 
not support CD text, it can play CDs with CD text in just the same way as it does 
"normal" audio CDs without CD text. This is possible because the additional CD 
text information is stored before the start of the audio data in the lead-in area of 
the CD. 
You must have a CD recorder which supports CD text in order to be able to write 
CD text to a CD. You can only write CD text in DAO recording mode (disc-at-
once). You can find out whether your recorder supports this feature in the Nero 
Choose Recorder dialog box. 
CD-Extra 
CD-Extra is a Blue Book standard recording format. It was previously called CD-
Plus and CD-Enhanced (Enhanced CD). This format has none of the 
disadvantages of standard mixed mode CDs. On mixed mode CDs the first track 
always contains an ISO file system, which means that audio CD players cannot 
play the first track of this type of CD. In contrast, CD-Extra has two sessions. 
The first session contains up to 98 audio tracks conforming to the Red Book 
standard. The second session contains the ISO track with the ISO9660 file 
system and the directories CDPLUS and PICTURES. This means that CDs in 
CD-Extra format can be played on both CD drives and audio CD players, as the 
second session cannot be "seen" by the audio CD player. 
CD-i 
The CD-i format (Compact Disc Interactive) was developed by Philips and Sony 
and is described in the Green Book. This format is particularly suited to the 
creation of interactive multimedia applications. These applications consist of sub-