This is digital media. If the data is uncorrupted then there can be no difference or should I understand this so that regular CDs usually contain corrupted/unreadable data? I doubt it to be honest. If someone who understands what digital data means and can explain why this is better this then please do. I don't like links so ctrl-c, ctrl-v please. Thanks. Sorry for sounding like a moron. I'm tired.
I'm also having a hard time believing that regular CD players suck so much that they can't reliably read regular CDs.
It's a LONG story.
Under IDEAL conditions, so with perfect manufacturing processes, equipment etc. etc., you're correct. They will still be the same. The data is encoded onto the disc in the EXACT same way etc. IT'S THE SAME DATA ON THE DISC.
However - in reality it's different. Remember back in the day when CDs came out, they were touted for a short time as being scratch resistent and all that stuff? There's a good reason why they went down that path. The reality is that to read data from the disc, the CD player shoots a laser to the CD. The laser actually passes through the clear plastic to the underside of the label, it's not reading the bottom of the disc, it's reading the top. So even with a pristinely clean CD, if there are any minute manufacturing irregularities or impurities in the plastic disc, there is the chance that the laser's reflection may not come back correctly.
CDs use a bunch of technologies to get around errors. They can re-read, they distribute data across the disc (data is not written in a linear fashion), they do parity checking, they do interpolation and they can then skip/mute sections of music if data just cannot be accurately read using these methods. So when you listen to a disc, even if it sounds absolutely perfect to you, you don't know how much error correction has been done in the process of getting the data off the disc.
By using a better plastic layer, there is less chance of errors being introduced during the read process.
The discs will still get dirty, scratched etc. But these discs are at least less susceptible to errors caused in the manufacturing process - to some degree.