CD stands for Compact Disc, a widely recognized digital storage medium that uses optical technology to record, read, and reproduce audio and data in a high-fidelity, durable format.
A Compact Disc (CD) is a digital optical disc that transformed how audio and data were stored and distributed by replacing analog recording with digital encoding. Using Pulse Code Modulation (PCM), the CD converts analog sound into 16-bit, 44.1 kHz digital samples, allowing up to 80 minutes of high-quality stereo audio on a standard 120 mm disc. Data is recorded as microscopic pits and lands on the reflective surface, which are read by a low-power laser for playback or data retrieval.
Beyond music, CDs became a versatile medium for software distribution, data archiving, and multimedia storage. In commercial audiovisual and broadcast environments, CDs have been used for testing, reference playback, and controlled content delivery. Their portability, reliability, and consistent format made them ideal for professional use before the widespread adoption of flash memory and cloud-based systems.
Although largely supplanted by newer technologies, the Compact Disc remains historically important. It established key digital audio parameters, such as bit depth and sampling rate, that continue to influence recording and playback standards in modern AV and communication systems.
The Compact Disc format was developed jointly by Philips and Sony in the early 1980s. The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) maintains related standards for digital audio and optical disc formats.
The Compact Disc was introduced commercially in 1982 following a collaboration between Philips and Sony to deliver a more durable, higher-fidelity alternative to vinyl records and magnetic tapes. Its success reshaped both consumer and professional audio markets, setting the benchmark for digital sound reproduction and influencing later optical media formats such as DVD and Blu-ray.