Question:
What is the difference between analog and digital?
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
What is the difference between analog and digital?
31 answers:
efes_haze
2007-10-24 02:35:17 UTC
Digital means that any measurement or value is converted into a number in binary format, (i.e.on or off, 1 or 0).

Digital computers talk in this language, hence it's almost universal use.



Analogue means measurements taken in the old fashioned way, e.g 5.67 metres or 7.6 volts. The value can be anywhere between zero and plus or minus infinity. Some old fashioned computers were analogue, e.g. the WWII American bomb aiming computer. They used servos and motors, gears, pulleys, etc.



In TV, an analogue transmission uses constantly changing voltage values to depict a picture. This uses up a lot of frequency space (bandwidth). In digital TV they quantify the picture as a binary number stream. Using clever coding techniques many TV channels can be mixed up together and yet still use the old amount of space one old analogue TV channel did.



When we all go to digital TV the spare frequency space or spectrum can then be sold off by the Government for easy bucks.
2007-10-24 02:09:51 UTC
Digital means that you're dealing with discrete units, while analog means you're dealing with a continuous range.



Eggs, for instance, are digital. You can go out to the henhouse and get 5 eggs or 6 eggs, but you'll never come back with something inbetween.



Milk, on the other hand, is analog. You might milk the cow and end up with 3.72 gallons, but it's actually an *estimate* as to how much you got, because milk is a continuous flow.



One of the biggest single advantages of digital seems to be that it allows for an *exact* copy. When you make an analog copy, it's not exactly the same as the original.



On the other hand, digital is "choppy". Back when you had woodburning stoves in the kitchen, the fire was on one end (typically the right) and there was a hot water reservoir at the other end, and you had a whole range of temperatures available. If your potatoes were cooking too fast, you simply would slide the skillet a little to the left.



You can adjust a gas flame under a skillet, but that doesn't change the temperature the gas burns at. Turning it down produces a smaller flame of the same temperature - so the taters in the *center* of the skillet continue to burn, while the taters on the *outside* of the skillet remain raw.



You can adjust an electric calrod to different temperatures, but although the switch appears to be infinitely variable, it actually only has about 100 positions at which it can be set.



Vinyl records are analog, and as such, offer a richer sound than possible using the sampling techniques required to make a digital recording. Most people cannot hear the difference - but many people can.



One of the reasons for switching from analog TV to digital TV is that sharper clearer broadcasts will be available using much less of the broadcast spectrum, allowing the old spectrum to be used, in part, for public safety purposes. When the first World Trade Tower collapsed, firemen and other rescue workers inside the other tower couldn't be warned to get out because collapse was imminent; the radios simply couldn't penetrate the buildings. The new spectrum being assigned for public safety radios is more capable of penetrating through buildings.



In addition, other extra spectrum being freed up will be auctioned off, bringing in a lot of money to the government.
Zheia
2007-10-24 16:12:08 UTC
Analogue is based on continuous flows of information, and which account for natural variations in sound. Old vinyl records sometimes sound better played on a high quality turntable compared to Compact Discs because of this more natural fuller sound. Digital sound is made up of 'blocks' or particles and don't have the natural ebbs and flows of sound.



It may be worth comparing a long play record with a CD, or DAB broadcasts with the equivalent coming through a vintage valve radio which would have used analogue technlogy.



Older Compacts Discs will have AAD, ADD, or DDD on the label somewhere: A for Analogue, D for Digital, in the recording, transfer and mastering.



It is a little like comparing a graph made of blocks with one showing more smoother curves.
2007-10-24 10:52:26 UTC
It depends what you mean by analog and digital?Do you mean analog and digital sound?



I make music on my computer and i have a selection of soft synthesisers that i use to make the music some are analog and some are digital.Analog sound is still used in all types of music because its produces unique sounds that cant be copied using digital.For example surround sound is digital sound,analog cant have surround sound because it isnt digital.Its hard to explain the difference if you havent heard what analog and digital sound like when making music.
2007-10-24 01:57:13 UTC
Analog: clock with a face and hands. Old low-definition television.



Digital: clock with electronic numeral display. High-definition television.



The basic difference is that analog devices operate by means of voltages or currents which vary over a wide range, whereas digital devices operate by means of electronic switches which have only two discrete levels: on or off, representing 1 and 0 in the binary number system. All information in a digital device is processed as numbers.



Hey thumbs down geek! U suk!!!
love_doctor
2007-10-24 01:54:11 UTC
Analog is physical and involves senses and mechanical. A digital needs a binary coding. I think that should be it.
2007-10-25 02:03:15 UTC
http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/question7.htm
2007-10-24 11:40:58 UTC
about 1000 quid
2007-10-24 02:00:22 UTC
analogue is a physical scale and indicator, like a needle on an amplifier..



digital is merely an alpha numeric display. covenient but ugly
hotmama
2007-10-25 04:20:21 UTC
I take it you need this for GCSE Physics =)



Well here is everything you will need to know :

Analogue:

These have a value between +1 and-1 and are send via a transverse wave. This form of a signal can be interfered with by diffraction and it is hard to regain the orignal signal to its full quality.



This is what he two wave signals look like:

http://www.webbasedprogramming.com/Tricks-of-the-Java-Programming-Gurus/f4-1.gif



Analogue is the top one and Digital is the bottom



Digital:

These have a value of 1 or 0 ( they use binary) and have a simple signal style (use above link). If interfered with you can easily regain the signal and the information.

Digital signals also use MULTIPLEXING (Need to know this) which means you can layer more than one signal down the same line.

So you can have say 5 telephone calls layer upon one another down one line opposed to one telephone call with a analogue signal.



Hope this helps :)
Grumpy Old Man
2007-10-24 23:41:18 UTC
In the context of your question an analog signal is an electromagnetic wave, think radio waves or even waves in the sea. Until the advent of digital communication this how TVs radios and telephones worked. The sound you get from your stereo is an analog sound wave, even if the input signal is digital. So what is a digital signal? Put simply it is 0 or 1 i.e. on or off. You could say that a light switch is digital. It's either on or off. It is called binary code, eg 1010 is decimal 10.. So the signal you get through your broadband or TV is in essence a stream of 0's and 1's. Clever ain't it.
johncob
2007-10-25 02:44:50 UTC
Analogue describes a value accurately, look at the hour hand on a normal clockwork clock, at half past the hour it is halfway between the two hours. The hours display on a digital clock will always show the last complete hour. Similarly, a sun-dial is analogue.

Currently, Music CD's are a good example of digital, whereas Vynil records or music cassette tapes are anaologue. The 'Purist' audiophile prefers analogue, because it is a truer representation, wheras digital is in the form of steps.

Analogue processing is "Real Time" and very fast, whereas digital can be lagging and slower.
2007-10-24 11:54:21 UTC
Digital is based on two numbers 0 and 1. Analog isn't
Martin A
2007-10-25 01:55:02 UTC
Analogue is simply the process of comparing with known physical laws and formulae. For example the first analogue computer was actually mechanical, comprising cogs and wheels a little like a syncromesh gearbox in a car. Whereas digital analysis or computers employ a method of taking little slices of the phenomena and then adding it all up to gain the overall picture of what is happening. These little bits are known in electronic parlance as bytes. It is utilising a mathematical system of calculus in fractions of seconds at any moment in time. Collectively is provides a simulation of the process you are trying to study. The speed factor is governed by how many bytes per second the machine can carry at any one time pro rata.
Sula
2016-01-27 05:49:03 UTC
difference analog digital
C W
2007-10-25 03:46:02 UTC
Well it depends what you mean... there's so many meaning. Analogue and Digital waves for example. Usually though digital is through binary 1's and 0's. Analogue is usually without the aide of computer-dirived processing.
-=iNsaNE pr0diGY=-
2007-10-24 01:57:25 UTC
Examples of analog technology:



1. photocopiers

2. telephones

3. audio tapes

4. televisions (intensity and color info per scan line)

5. VCRs (same as TV)



Digital Technology are computers , laptops etc.



Analog machines are more prone to suffer degradation while a Digital Machine will correct its errors....
2014-10-04 01:28:46 UTC
I'm making big money with binary option, I use this software ( http://forexsignal.kyma.info ) My software delivers signals only when the five indicators (bp trend filter, market deviation, price pattern, rel. price impulse, stat. price range) are aligned together and we have an extremely high confidence rate, it must then co-exist with my proven secret strategy before a trade be detected… as a result, we get a guaranteed Highly-Accurate ’80-100%’ Signal.
Jackie M
2007-10-25 04:21:10 UTC
Digital is a better picture with high definition.
deni
2007-10-24 01:56:27 UTC
the link below should explain it all for you, but as i have basically come to understand it, for a simpleton such as myself, analog is dials digital is buttons, and digital gives you a much better signal in the long run
2016-02-15 04:29:40 UTC
If you want to make money with binary options then this detailed educational articles and strategy guides. Go here https://tr.im/TQfsA

These will teach you to efficiently trade financial assets and increase your winning probabilities. You can implement these strategies at binary options brokers. The idea is to always choose legit and reputable brokers to avoid being scammed
2007-10-24 01:57:25 UTC
Analogue is continuous, digital is 1 & 0's.

Analogue is used for simple programs and is very quick.

Digital is much more flexible, but is slower.

See below.
Gamar
2007-10-24 01:54:17 UTC
Analog is by hand. Digital is using digital devices like a computer.
UTD TILL I DIE
2007-10-25 04:09:24 UTC
about £300 because they get us to buy one then a few years later tell us that its no good any more and need to buy the other one and hey presto we end up buying both in the end
AyiS
2007-10-24 01:54:58 UTC
take for exmaple a wristwatch... the one with hands is analog.. the one that has only numbers indicating time is digital..
teddy
2007-10-24 11:14:18 UTC
Digital dosent work when it rains, snows, is windy etc.
2007-10-24 08:11:25 UTC
analogue is the real thing ; digital is just an inaccurate representation thereof
Shaikh I
2007-10-24 01:57:53 UTC
analog is a mechanical system and digital is electronic system
Rick Harley
2007-10-24 12:23:39 UTC
Analog. Digital. What’s the Difference?



Analog phone lines. Analog signals. Digital security. Digital PBX. Analog-to-digital adapters. What does it all mean? In the telecom world, understanding analog versus digital isn't as simple as comparing one technology to another. It depends on what product—and in some cases, which product feature—you happen to be talking about.



Analog at a glance

As a technology, analog is the process of taking an audio or video signal (in most cases, the human voice) and translating it into electronic pulses. Digital on the other hand is breaking the signal into a binary format where the audio or video data is represented by a series of "1"s and "0"s. Simple enough when it's the device—analog or digital phone, fax, modem, or likewise—that does all the converting for you.



Is one technology better than the other? Analog technology has been around for decades. It's not that complicated a concept and it's fairly inexpensive to use. That's why we can buy a $20 telephone or watch a few TV stations with the use of a well-placed antenna. The trouble is, analog signals have size limitations as to how much data they can carry. So with our $20 phones and inexpensive TVs, we only get so much.



Enter digital

The newer of the two, digital technology breaks your voice (or television) signal into binary code—a series of 1s and 0s—transfers it to the other end where another device (phone, modem or TV) takes all the numbers and reassembles them into the original signal. The beauty of digital is that it knows what it should be when it reaches the end of the transmission. That way, it can correct any errors that may have occurred in the data transfer. What does all that mean to you? Clarity. In most cases, you'll get distortion-free conversations and clearer TV pictures.



You'll get more, too. The nature of digital technology allows it to cram lots of those 1s and 0s together into the same space an analog signal uses. Like your button-rich phone at work or your 200-plus digital cable service, that means more features can be crammed into the digital signal.



Compare your simple home phone with the one you may have at the office. At home you have mute, redial, and maybe a few speed-dial buttons. Your phone at work is loaded with function keys, call transfer buttons, and even voice mail. Now, before audiophiles start yelling at me through their PC screens, yes, analog can deliver better sound quality than digital…for now. Digital offers better clarity, but analog gives you richer quality.



But like any new technology, digital has a few shortcomings. Since devices are constantly translating, coding, and reassembling your voice, you won't get the same rich sound quality as you do with analog. And for now, digital is still relatively expensive. But slowly, digital—like the VCR or the CD—is coming down in cost and coming out in everything from cell phones to satellite dishes.



When you're shopping in the telecom world, you often see products touted as "all digital." Or warnings such as "analog lines only." What does it mean? The basic analog and digital technologies vary a bit in definition depending on how they're implemented. Read on.



Phone lines

Analog lines, also referred to as POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service), support standard phones, fax machines, and modems. These are the lines typically found in your home or small office. Digital lines are found in large, corporate phone systems.



How do you tell if the phone line is analog or digital? Look at the back of the telephone connected to it. If you see "complies with part 68, FCC Rules" and a Ringer Equivalence Number (REN), then the phone and the line are analog. Also, look at the phone's dialpad. Are there multiple function keys? Do you need to dial "9" for an outside line? These are indicators that the phone and the line are digital.



A word of caution. Though digital lines carry lower voltages than analog lines, they still pose a threat to your analog equipment. If you're thinking of connecting your phone, modem, or fax machine to your office's digital phone system, DON'T! At the very least, your equipment may not function properly. In the worst case, you could zap your communications tools into oblivion.



How? Let's say you connect your home analog phone to your office's digital line. When you lift the receiver, the phone tries to draw an electrical current to operate. Typically this is regulated by the phone company's central office. Since the typical proprietary digital phone system has no facilities to regulate the current being drawn through it, your analog phone can draw too much current—so much that it either fries itself or in rare cases, damages the phone system's line card.



What to do? There are digital-to-analog adapters that not only let you use analog equipment in a digital environment, but also safeguard against frying the internal circuitry of your phone, fax, modem, or laptop. Some adapters manufactured by Konexx come designed to work with one specific piece of office equipment: phone, modem, laptop, or teleconferencer. Simply connect the adapter in between your digital line and your analog device. That's it. Or you can try a universal digital-to-analog adapter such as Hello Direct's LineStein®. It works with any analog communications device. Plus, it's battery powered so you're not running extra cords all over your office.



Cordless phones

The very nature of digital technology—breaking a signal into binary code and recreating it on the receiving end—gives you clear, distortion-free cordless calls. Cordless phones with digital technology are also able to encrypt all those 1s and 0s during transmission so your conversation is safe from eavesdroppers. Plus, more power can be applied to digital signals and thus, you'll enjoy longer range on your cordless phone conversations.



The advantage to analog cordless products? Well, they're a bit cheaper. And the sound quality is richer. So unless you need digital security, why not save a few bucks and go with an analog phone? After all, in home or small office environments where you may be the only cordless user, you won't have any interference issues.



Keep in mind, when talking about digital and analog cordless phones, you're talking about the signals being transferred between the handset and its base. The phones themselves are still analog devices that can only be used on analog lines. Also, the range of your cordless phone—analog or digital—will always depend on the environment.



Cellular phones

Perhaps the most effective use of the digital versus analog technology is in the booming cellular market. With new phone activations increasing exponentially, the limits of analog are quickly being realized. Digital cellular lets significantly more people use their phones within a single coverage area. More data can be sent and received simultaneously by each phone user. Plus, transmissions are more resistant to static and signal fading. And with the all-in-one phones out now—phone, pager, voice mail, internet access—digital phones offer more features than their analog predecessors.



Analog's sound quality is still superior—as some users with dual-transmission phones will manually switch to analog for better sound when they're not concerned with a crowded coverage area—but digital is quickly becoming the norm in the cellular market.



What to buy?

The first thing to consider when buying analog or digital equipment is where you'll be using it. If you're buying for a proprietary PBX phone system, you'll need to get the digital phone designed for that particular system. Need to connect a conferencer on your digital system? Opt for a digital-to-analog adapter. Shopping for home office equipment? Most everything you'll consider is analog. Want an all-in-one cellular phone—paging, voice mail, web? A digital cellular phone will deliver it all. In fact, the only head-scratcher may be your cordless phone purchase. Looking for security and distortion-free conversations in your small office? Go with a digital 900 MHz or 2.4 GHz cordless phone. Using a cordless at home? An analog phone will give you the richest sound quality and usually enough range.
Spinnah
2007-10-24 01:54:05 UTC
wristwatches
2007-10-24 01:54:02 UTC
one is easier to read than the other.... lol..


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...