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Disc Writers Now Print the Label Too

gardolas writes "Rippers and burners with an eye for design have a new way to smarten their image. Disc writers that can print images onto the label sides of the discs will hit the market next month. The LightScribe system has been developed by Verbatim and HP."

6 of 258 comments (clear)

  1. That's a good idea by DoorFrame · · Score: 5, Funny

    At last the goatse guy can make an album! I've been waiting for so long. And hell, the hold is already built into the disc!

    1. Re:That's a good idea by Antonymous+Flower · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'll never hold a CD the same way again..

    2. Re:That's a good idea by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Funny

      At last the goatse guy can make an album! I've been waiting for so long. And hell, the hold is already built into the disc!

      Want something even worse? Consider what a CD looks like when it's stored in an ordinary (single-CD) case. The part in the centre looks like a puckered... umm... and you have to stick your finger in it to get the CD out.

      I'm listening to nothing but MP3s from now on.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  2. Re:Obvious question, but... by Blapto · · Score: 5, Informative

    LightScribe blanks will cost more than ordinary discs, but Verbatim says the difference will be less than the price of a sticky label and the ink needed to print on it. But anyone wanting to use the new system will need to buy a LightScribe drive, and that will cost around $200.
    Says the New Scientist article linked to above. So I'd guesstimate that it would be around 50 cents per disk...

  3. Re:Next month? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well it was next month, the first time /. ran this story.

  4. Message from a beta-tester... by minga · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was a beta tester for the LightScribe program and have one of the external burners. Here are some answers about MY experience.

    1) There are 3 different modes/quality settings for burning the graphic. Good/Better/Best. The "BEST" setting is the darkest, and takes around 45 minutes for a good graphic. Pure text is quicker. And the "good" setting burns really quick with just plain text.

    2) I forget the software provided - but it's a basic label making software package that usually prints on Avery labels. It is pretty powerful and easy to use. Easy to import graphics, manipulate text, etc. Works with any font you have. And even comes with about 30-50 "built in" designs that are soft of cheezy - but look good.

    3) The media is "special". No idea of cost. My big complaint was that the print able service was GOLD. So, the dark didnt show up as well as I had hoped it would. If the top was silver or white it would be alot cooler. Hopefully they figure out a way to do that.

    4) The external burner is either FIREWIRE or USB2. It is a CDRW burner. It is also a 4x (single layer) DVD burner. Mine is external and BLACK - comes with a seperate power supply cord that is nice and small. I never tried it in Linux, sorry.

    5) Right now , the media is CDR only. But when I asked about DVDR media in LightScribe format I was not greeted with "no, way". But instead I was informed that if the media became available during beta testing, they would send it. That sort of tells me its in the works.

    Burning: The only problem I ever had was burning some DVDR images using Nero. I dont know why it didnt work. Got to 99.9% done and never finished. The problem eventually fixed itself. Everything worked perfectly with the provided software.

    Overall (This is what I told HP as well):

    I was happy with the device and would continue to use is AS LONG as the media wasn't TOO pricey.

    The burning of the image takes too long - but for CDs that I REALLY care about - I am willing to wait. But I wouldnt use the fancy light-scribe media for all the crap I burn and only use once or twice.