Yamaha CD-RW Drive Writes Images In Substrate
johnny5 writes: "Yamaha has recently demonstrated a new CD-RW drive that can write images into the unused space on a CD-R disc after the data track is written. The technology, called DiscT@2(TM), is due out in Japan in July. The images print on to the CD at approximately 250dpi, making graphics as well as text possible. More info can be found at Yamaha's CD-RW site (in English) as well as at Akiba PC Hotline (in Japanese, with better pictures. Babelfish for suitably akward translation). No word on a timeframe for U.S. availability"
No more losing my WaReZ cd keys!
- tristan
How about burning in something like 'Fuck you RIAA' onto every CD-R. That'd make them happy.
For anyone wondering what the word 'hack' actually means, THIS IS IT.
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
So not only can we make pirated CD's, we can now put copy protected images on them as well... you probably can't see it, but I'm doing a little dance for joy over here, knowing that I can piss off the RIAA even more
Next step, incorporating this wonderful gadget into your fridge/freezer/1970's jukebox
what will they think of next
my last sig was too controversial... now, a new and improved useless sig!
For smaller companies, now that is a different matter and something likw that would be rather neat and useful.
Plus, isn't the market moving more and more towards DVD burners? I have a 4x CD burner at the moment and when I upgrade i'll be looking more and more at a hybrid CDR/RW/DVD combination job and not a 32x CDRW with the ability to burn pictures on it.
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
So it will only "draw" on unused parts of the disk, basically taking up space... crap.
Free Mac Mini
I like this text from the product info page:
Yea! Yippee! Those floppies sure are quick! And with the amount of data loss I've seen, those floppies are easy, too! Someone should sit down with their marketing people and show them that most of us probably wouldn't interpret that sentence as a compliment to their product.
Assuming it is as you say it is not so easy. You need to insure that the writer will not barf. After all you feeding it with some data which according to the red book is garbage or pretty close to garbage. So the writer should allow turning off all error and sanity checks.
Alternatively it is very good software that merges an image on top of data that is acceptable to a normal CD writer.
In either case it is not just PI, elementary calculations and a bitmap.
Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
http://www.sigsegv.cx/
The visibility of the burned track depends on the kind of substrate used on the particular CD blank. Green ones show up best. Pale yellow ones are often almost invisible.
Does this mean that the Yamaha drive will only be effective on green CDs, or does the laser use a different strength to burn the piccies?
The "point" is that CD-R drives have become a commodity, and they're trying to stand out. Two years ago, I bought CD-R drives largely on brand, for the most part sticking with Yamaha and Plextor. It used to make a difference; I had cheap drives die on me after only a few hundred burns, whereas Plextor and Yamaha drives typically make it into the 10,000's.
However, for the last year or so, (at least, in my experience) a drive is a drive; they all work just fine and there's not much reason to get more than a $70 CompUSA-branded Sanyo or something. Yamaha and other higher-end manufacturers have had to cut prices drastically to remain competitive.
There are better and faster media being developed, but they're in the lab. When it comes time to develop a standard in the industry to utilize those media, I'm sure Yamaha will be at the table. In the mean time, they have to make money selling the product that's coming out the door now.
Having a drive that does something cool like this sets it apart and might make people spend an extra $20 for a Yamaha drive.
Heh, I thought it was :)
Disc, Tea at 2:00
But yours makes more sense.
Look! You can make your own front side labels on your computer!
I know becuase I did a lot of research on this. I went to Best Buy and talked to their knowledgable staff and they told me this was the thing we needed. And they said it was "Sweet" so I had to get it. They also told be I should buy the extended warranty contract, so of course I did- you never know when some "new technology" is going to break and you won't be able to fix it.
In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
To read the page mentioned in the article simply cut-and-paste the URL.
"Customers can put graphics, such as signatures, logos, memorandums, and photo images onto CD-R's unused area after data writing."
Look closely: there is a very small data area (inner circle) on the picture, all other space is unused.
Obligatory complaint: why, this is barely news at all; a very similar story was reported in Slashdot just a few decades ago, in 1961.
The PDP-1 used eight-channel punched paper tape as the predominant storage medium, punching at a speedy 60 characters per second and reading at an ungodly-fast 200 characters per second.
On program tapes, prior to the start of the actual binary program data, the assembler would punch a human-readable label in which the title was spelled out in human-readable format in the block letters made out of patterns of holes. IIRC a 5x7 matrix, a little ugly because a horizontal line of little feed holes ran through the center of the character which meant that not only did the characters look "overstruck," but the spacing between rows 3 and 4 was a little wider than the spacing between other rows.
I wonder what the earliest use of "kludging directly human-readable data into a medium that was intended only to be machine-readable?"
I seem to recall that IBM card decks had a couple of preamble cards in which the punches spelled out a code number in block letters.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!