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I'd like to explain differences of tape-casette and cd in a non-technical manner assuming she has no understanding of binary.

This is to prove that Einstein is mistaken in saying "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."

EDIT: Appropriate answers should be simple as Einstein mentioned. :)

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The difference between tape and cd quality is not due to the difference between analog and digital - you can make a digital recording that sounds just as crappy as an analog one, and vice versa. The difference is due to the amount of noise recorded onto the media, and the amount of noise added when reading from the media and translating that to sound. With the right equipment, analog fidelity can be just as good or better then digital. – mbeckish Jul 24 at 13:43
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All true, but the question doesn't actually mention explaining the difference in quality. I assumed the difference in technology is what matters, and in my answer threw in a bit about quality just because the explanation of the different mechanisms might naturally raise the question. – Steve Jessop Jul 24 at 13:59
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How is this programming related? – Jeremy Cron Jul 24 at 14:10
@mbeckish: I did not mention quality or noise. They are just samples. @JCron: This is non-tech. – dereli Jul 24 at 14:26
why are legitimate questions closed as "not programming related" while questions like these stay open? this has nothing to do with programming. – orlandu63 Jul 24 at 14:42
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closed as not programming related by gnovice, Sergio, SilentGhost, Binary Worrier, David Dorward Jul 24 at 14:53

25 Answers

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Analogue is a continuously variable signal or physical quantity that is measurable (e.g hot at cold)

Digital is the measurement.

It's impossible to make a perfect analogue copy. However we can make perfect copies of its digital measurement, and convert it back to something close to it's original form when required.

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Okay, from the last edit by the poster, I understand the inquiry better. So ....

Analog uses a physical arrangement of things (however tiny) to store information. Digital does not. (Digital media does, but that's not the same thing!)

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I think people are being a bit too technical with these answers...they are all correct but my mom in particular would glaze over listening to most of them.

Here is my barebones description for someone who knows nothing about this kind of thing.

Analog is an actual copy of something. For instance if someone copied a painting to another canvas, the new painting is analog, it is an actual real copy that someone can look at.

Digital is a description of something. For instance, if someone wrote a detailed description of what the painting looks like. This description can be used to recreate an actual copy of the painting in any other format (the imagination, another canvas, etc).

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This answer does not touch upon the idea of discrete vs continuous at all – barfoon Jul 24 at 19:58
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I think Josh is onto something...

You're not going to be able to truly explain it to her the way you understand it yourself. So just let that idea go. what you can do is just give her a feel for the difference... using something she is more familiar with.

you could say that the difference between analog and digital is something like the difference between a typical painting (where the colors seamlessly blend from one to the next) and the styles of Stippling or Pointillism or Divisionism (where the impression is made up of a bunch of dots). this is something you can show her visually, that she is more likely to grasp onto.

in that sense, you could put in a DVD and place her really close to the TV and point out the pixels... and then pull out the embarrassing old Super8 video she inevitably has of you or one of your family members taking a bath, and show her how the colors on each screen of that image blend, but the one on your TV is made up of a zillion tiny dots... and discuss how the old Super8 video is "wearing out" but the DVD video is still crisp/clear and will always be so...

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non-technical manner

The practical difference is that you can always filter (a reasonable level of) noise out of digital signal, but analog degrades over time (all stages of sound processing, longer cables, copying a tape, etc.)

I don't see a point in non-technical explanation beyond this.

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It think what's most important is that analog signals are continuous, whereas digital has discrete values. I find it easier to explain what's digital : a movie for example has 26 frames per seconds, and between two frames the movie doesn't exist (you cannot watch it). Now time is analogic, and during the next hour there won't be a moment where you can tell "right now, there is no time".

CD and tapes have the same distinction : on a cd, the music is engraved in small chunk, and in between, there is no music, just plastic. On a tape, whatever place you choose on the strip, there will be music.

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An analog recording is a measurement of the sound waves, the vibrations in the air. As if you put your hand on a piano and recorded the sensations in your hand. Whereas, a digital recording takes the analog sound, and copies the best guess.

I think a better analog (pardon the pun), would be to use a painting as an example. Imagine taking a Monet and saying to Claude, okay, that's great, now you need to paint with only these 256 colors and they can't mix. The difference between analog and digital is the same. Digital looks fine and sounds fine until you get into the weeds. When you zoom in and look at a very small section of painting or recording, you see that digital has to place things in an imperfect basket. The value it might want to use is 4, but it has only a bucket with 3 and 5 to chose from.

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She must know about digital and analog watches. Looking at a digital watch there is no question about what time it shows. With an analog watch you look at it and mentally convert the angle of the hands to a time like 12:34. In doing so you round the analog value into a digital value.

So an important difference is that of measuring. As a consequence, it is easy to copy and transmit the time of a digital watch -- when someone asks you about the time you can reply "it's 12:34" and you will have made a perfect, flawless copy of the information on the watch. With an analog watch you cannot really do that, you can only report the time up to some precision (hours, minutes, and seconds, typically).

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analog is like daddy without viagra.

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+1 for registering the username "zing" just for this answer. – Greg Jul 24 at 14:27
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Mama, you know how you told me to clean my room and when you asked me about it I said I couldn't hear you or that maybe I thought you said I could clean it later? Well, if you had said this digitally I would always know exactly and perfectly what you said. Every word you said I would have been able to hear and know word for word what you said and I wouldn't have an excuse. But, because yelled it across the house, I could only make out bits and pieces, and so I did what I thought you might have said, which, incidentally, was not to clean my room.

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The best way to explain two contrasting ideas to someone not skilled in the field under discussion, it is easiest if you give the merits and demerits of each.

  • Analog can give you very high quality music recordings, but it will be more expensive than digital.
  • Digital format is easier to copy and transfer, lasting longer. Analog is more cumbersome to maintain.
  • One can secure digital formats by locking access (DRM etc).

And so on.

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Einstein also said, "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."

Analog is real. Digital is an approximation. Digital can never "capture" as well as analog. However, our ability to replicate or transmit/receive is limited for analog; less so for digital.

Although digital can't capture as well as analog, the difference is becoming negligible. Thus a music recording engineer can finally now skip using magnetic tape. But this is very recent indeed, from a real world point of view.

So, analog may be compared to a plaster cast of the print of a tire tread left in the dust. And digital could be looked at as a set of measurements that, put together, describe the same print. The former is easy, accurate, true; also a plaster cast is hard to file away, and skill is needed not to disturb the print (which of course is destroyed in the process).

The latter, digital, is only as true as the measurements; many measurements are needed for any semblance of description. It's beyond the ability of a person to do the measuring. You can assess the benefit of computers by how they make possible a replacement of the casting method.

A target shooter needs both accuracy and precision. The plaster cast is gloriously accurate, but not precise. The converse is true for the digital process.

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+1 An excellent answer. I can't see why it was downvoted, except possibly that as an explanation it'll be lost on poor Mother :) – Binary Worrier Jul 24 at 14:36
i was worried about poor mother ... so i included that Einstein quote ... Thanks for the compliment. – Smandoli Jul 24 at 14:48
Sorry, but this is a red herring - analogue vs. digital has nothing to do with accuracy. An analogue sound recording is never perfect as no equipment can completely capture the physical situation. If it's within the physical uncertainty on the signal value then it doesn't matter if the output of the 'capture' is digital or analogue - any extra significant figures are just noise (literally in this case!) – Scott Griffiths Jul 28 at 15:57
I disagree, with curious interest in learning where I'm wrong. My premise is that a digital copy of an analog artifact would never perfectly reproduce it. Therefore it's less accurate. Note I said copy, not facsimile or model. – Smandoli Jul 28 at 18:30
It's true that making a copy isn't going to improve the accuracy, but that goes both ways - an analogue copy of a digital signal might never perfectly reproduce it either; it doesn't make analogue or digital intrinsically more accurate. A good quality digital capture of a physical phenomenum is better than a bad quality analogue capture, that is the point I'm trying to make. A recording being analogue doesn't make it perfect... – Scott Griffiths Jul 28 at 21:09
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Males are from digital, Females are from analog. As illustrated Here.

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Down-voted ... hmm ... females are from digital? If I've had this wrong, could explain some things. Things my mother probably understands. – Smandoli Jul 24 at 15:21
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Draw two pictures: one is a wave representing the analogue information on the cassette tape, the second is the same wave but sliced up at regular intervals to represent the digital interpretation of the wave.

You could also explain to her that this is the reason why CD isn't an ideal format for music with lots of distortion due to the wave jumping around too much between slices.

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The cassette will record a singer's voice like you normally hear but this will include noise as well. You can imagine it as a continuous wave like the ocean. The further apart the first peak from the next will determine the pitch, ie. frequency. The height of the wave will determine the volume.

For the cd, this continuous wave is stored in fixed steps like a staircase. Because it is done so, noise is easier to separate. These fixed steps are so tiny that normally people will not hear it.

You can go on to talk about quantization noise if your mum wants to learn more.

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Digital - check whether the light is on or off. Analog - measure how bright the light is.

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I like the simplicity of some of the other answers. This may be another way to relate the formation of sound waves from digital information:

Perhaps you could draw two pictures that look like two sine waves. The first is a nice, smooth line. The second would be a line that might look smooth from far away, but is made up of horizontal lines that are at stepped intervals, like so:

            ----
          --    --
-        -        -          -
 --    --          ---    ---
   ----               ----

This way, she could see that while it approximates a smooth wave, and is converted back to it pretty effectively these days, it does lose a little fidelity.

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Tape cassettes hold a magnetic signal on a long piece of tape whereas a CD holds much more information in microscopic bumps on the surface which are read by shining a light on them.

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You haven't said how that relates to digital/analog. – CiscoIPPhone Jul 24 at 13:29
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Stairs are digital, a ramp is analog.

Another interesting issue I run into from analog is copies getting 'worse' each time. Xerox of a Xerox of a Xerox. Copy a copy of a copy of a tape - not as good as the original. Not so with digital.

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"Not so with digital" - at least, not until you open the discussion to include lossy compression... – Steve Jessop Jul 24 at 13:30
I'd have said the exact same thing :) – Davide Vosti Jul 24 at 14:05
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Tape, analog. The tape player continuously makes some measurement on the tape (magnetic field strength or however the things actually work), and feeds this measurement into the speaker (or amplifier). As the analog measurement wobbles about, the speaker coil wobbles about, this makes sound.

CD, digital. The CD player reads a whole number written on the CD (written in binary, but that's not really what's important. The significant difference is that it's an integer). It then uses a sequence of these numbers to generate (in a DAC) a wobbly signal, which goes to the speaker.

It's maybe like the difference between forming a curve (the waveform) out of a curved bit of metal, or forming a curve out of a whole bunch of towers of lego bricks of different lengths, placed close together in the right order, so that their tops form an approximation to the curve. Digital is the lego bricks, and it means you can describe the shape of the curve just by saying how many bricks in each tower. A CD just stores numbers. Analog you have to represent the curve with some continuously-varying property, like the magnetic field strength and alignment on a tape, or the wiggly groove on a record. A tape player in effect stores an actual scaled-down model of the sound wave.

Then you have to explain why digital is better quality than analog, despite digital being an approximation and analog being in theory able to precisely reproduce the sound wave. The answer to that is physical flaws in the recording medium, and error-correction...

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I like the lego analogy – Kena Jul 24 at 13:33
+1 for a good explanation – Nuno Furtado Jul 24 at 13:43
-1: my mother won't understand it at all – IlDan Jul 24 at 15:34
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Sound is just very fast variations in air pressure. An analogue medium like tape directly records these variations in pressure as variations in something else (magnetic field, depth of a groove on an LP). A digital medium like a CD instead records these variations as a very long sequence of numbers.

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This is an excellent explanation. My mother would just stare at me :) – n8wrl Jul 24 at 13:36
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Building on ewanm89's answer:

If digital is an ordinary light switch (can be on or off), and analogue is a dimmer switch, then...

  • a cassette tape stores dimmer level settings in sequences which are just reproduced as stored

  • a CD stores a sequence of on/off signals, which are decoded by the player and interpreted as instructions for how/what to play.

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and I was trying to think up a car analogy ^^ – ewanm89 Jul 24 at 13:17
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Well, digital is an ordinary light switch, analogue is a dimmer switch.

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And you can then confuse her by telling her that, at some level, all digital communication is analog. – Adam Robinson Jul 24 at 13:23
I don't think this will give mother a better understanding of the difference in principle between a CD player and a tape player. It is not obvious to her that there exists anything which CD players turn on and off but which tape players dim. – Steve Jessop Jul 24 at 13:25
Such an elegant answer, +1 – barfoon Jul 24 at 13:35
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@Adam ... and then confuse her again by pointing out that at an even lower level, the entire universe is digital (discrete). – Aaron Maenpaa Jul 24 at 14:09
A good example but I don't think it gives enough clue what digital and analog is. – dereli Jul 24 at 14:29
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Analog has better quality, Digital is easy to carry and use.

digital is something countable, analog is infinite?

i mean there are infinite point between 0 and 1 in analog, but in digital, there is not..

digital is sampling of analog.

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digital may not be a square wave... morse code is digital, it's the turning on and off a sine wave. – ewanm89 Jul 24 at 13:14
no, you put digital wave on to a analog wave to carry it.. – ufukgun Jul 24 at 13:14
Infact, most digital radio modes do not use square waves for various reasons, but change other elements, like using phase switching, or frequency switching. – ewanm89 Jul 24 at 13:15
no they gets analog wave. then they get a digital wave from these analog waves. then process with the digital wave – ufukgun Jul 24 at 13:17
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digital light on / light off, analog analogic not so simple! :)

great question!

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