WORM

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Write Once, Read Many

  • An optical disc storage device that uses laser technology similar to the CD-ROM. Information written to the WORM disc, cannot be altered. The advantages of WORM are increased disc density and life expectancy.[1]
  • Data storage devices (e.g. CD-ROM's) where the space on the disks can only be written once. The data is permanently stored. This is often today's primary media for archival information.

    The expected viable lifetime of a WORM is at least 50 years. Since it's impossible to change, the government treats it just like paper or microfilm and it is accepted in litigation and other record-keeping application.

    On the negative side, there is no current standard for how WORM's are written. The only ISO standard is for the 14" version, manufactured only by one vendor. A 5.25" standard is emerging from the European Computer Manufacturing Association but is not yet accepted. Further, WORM discs are written on both sides, but there are currently no drives that read both sides at the same time. As for speed, WORM is faster than tape or CD-ROM, but slower than magnetic. Typical disk access times run between 40 and 150 milliseconds (compared with 11 ms for fast magnetic disks and 300 ms for CD-ROM. Data transfer rates run between 1 and 2 MB/sec (compared with 5 to 10 for magnetic discs and 600KB/sec for CD-ROM.

    Disk sizes run from 5.25" (1.3 gigabytes) to 12" (8 to 10 gigabytes) capacities. There is also a 14'" disc (13 to 15 gigabytes), only manufactured by Kodak's optical storage group. WORM's can also be configured into jukeboxes. There are various technologies:


Technology Description Benefit Drawback
Ablative: Laser burns holes in disk Unalterable data Dust, moisture may affect media
Bubble-forming: Laser forms bubbles in the media Unalterable data Few drives available
Dye Polymer: Laser heats dyed layer to form bumps Potential low media cost Laser mechanism more expensive; disks wear out faster; few drives available
Magneto: Laser focuses magnetic field Many suppliers, long disk life No true WORM in multi-function; data theoretically alterable
Phase change: Laser heat changes disk's molecular structure One-pass data (no erase step) Same as Dye Polymer
From Imaging Magazine, September, 1994[2]

Footnotes

  1. ^  Legal Electronic Document Institute, Basic Principles of Automated Litigation Support (2005).
  2. ^  American Document Management, Glossary of Terms, http://www.amdoc.com/glossary.shtml.

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