Short for
digital versatile disc or
digital video disc, a type of optical disk technology similar to the
CD-ROM. A DVD holds a minimum of 4.7
GB of data, enough for a full-length movie. DVDs are commonly used as a medium for digital representation of movies and other multimedia presentations that combine sound with graphics.
The DVD specification supports disks with capacities of from 4.7GB to 17GB and access rates of 600KBps to 1.3 MBps. One of the best features of DVD drives is that they are backward-compatible with CD-ROMs, meaning they can play old CD-ROMs, CD-I disks, and video CDs, as well as new DVD-ROMs. Newer DVD players can also read CD-R disks.
DVD uses MPEG-2 to compress video data.
For comparison and contrast, see DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW and DVD-RAM.
Also see DVD Formats Explained in the Did You Know . . . ? section of Webopedia.