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View Full Version : an inquiry from a novice.


neopsytox
13-05-2001, 23:12
let me start off by stating that i am not a gamer.
also, i just came across this site about 30 minutes ago, and instead of using the search, being that i wouldn't know exactly what to type into the search to answer my question, i decided to post here. i am not looking for smart alec remarks. i am not stupid, but am only ignorant to this new technology. i would just like someone to explain some things to me or send me to a specific page that intricately answers my question(s).

i understand that when you use a xerox machine to copy a piece of paper, the quality is degraded and it isn't an exact duplicate, it is more like a draft. that it has to do with the light, balance, and the limitations of the magnification of the machine.

when using a cd burner, is it because of the newness of the technology that we cannot exactly duplicate a cd? do you think it will be in the near future or ever at all that cd-burners are created which will make an exact clone?

when someone plays a playstation game, the system isn't writing to the disc, so my big question is why exactly cannot a cd-writer capture all files and data/scripts from the original to be burnt onto the blank? how are these discs being made so special that it has more than just files to copy? by the way, i am also not a programmer, so maybe it has something to do with an assembly language (?)

what is so intricate that the cd-writer isn't capturing that requires a mod-chip to be used when playing a copy? this is something that i do not understand. of course when playing a console game on the computer, i understand the use of an emulator, but when using the actual console itself...well, i would just like an explanation.

i am not a hardware guru or game buff or programmer. i am just an average person with questions that pop into my mind at anytime, questions that i like to have answered for the benefit of knowledge.

BOT
13-05-2001, 23:33
In the first place any original cd, be it PSX game, PC game, application. music or whatever, are pressed and not burned.
The pressing equipment has access to areas of a cd that any reader or burner cannot access.
In the case of PSX an authentification code is pressed into an area of the cd that is unreachable by readers/burners.
The modchip fools the PSX into thinking it has accessed that unreachable data.