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  1. http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,114592,tk,wb030804x,00.asp

    "Looking for a way to label your multitude of CDs and DVDs neatly and efficiently? HP has come up with an elegant answer: Use the same laser that already burned the data to make a label on the flip side of the disc.

    A technology dubbed LightScribe enables drives to burn a silk screen-like, high-contrast label on the upper side of CD or DVD media bearing a special coating. After completing a data burn, users will be prompted to flip the disc over to burn a label onto the other side.






    The first LightScribe drives and media are expected to hit the market about six months from now, from leading manufacturers such as Hitachi-LG, MicroVision, Mitsubishi Chemical, Moser Baer India, Sonic Solutions, and Toshiba. HP estimates that a drive that uses LightScribe will carry a premium of about $10 over the going price today, and that a disc will cost about a dime more than today's discs.

    "There are no consumables like ink or ink jet cartridges; the only consumable is the disc itself," says Daryl Anderson, project manager and HP engineer responsible for inventing the technology as part of a joint effort between HP's Imaging and Printing Group and its Personal Systems Group.

    HP's technology differs from Yamaha's DiscT@2, introduced a year ago on the CRW-F1 CD-RW drive (see "Tattoo You: Burn Your Own CD Labels"). DiscT@2 burns a label on the disc's underside, reducing the amount of data the disc can store; and the exposure of the data side renders it more easily scratched or scuffed.

    HP notes that LightScribe is likely to show up eventually on such consumer electronics products as stereo-component CD recording decks and set-top DVD recorders.
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  2. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Nice item, but too late for me. I've already bought all I plan to buy for quite a while.
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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  3. I'm waiting to see one of these puppies b4 I buy a burner.. hopefully more than one Mfr will do it .. thus easing prices. Or will they just wait and bring it out on their new D/L burner so its a USP??
    Announce it.. wait six-nine months... then it appears.
    FUD..vapourware...reality?
    Corned beef is now made to a higher standard than at any time in history.
    The electronic components of the power part adopted a lot of Rubycons.
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  4. Member painkiller's Avatar
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    I will be waiting to see this device.

    Considering the costs of labels and ink, I would prefer this approach myself.

    That way, at least for me, every so many months of $30 to $50 per ink cartridge as well as $30 to $60 for labels.....

    Well, you do the math.
    Whatever doesn't kill me, merely ticks me off. (Never again a Sony consumer.)
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  5. Member ice-berg's Avatar
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    i have seen pics of some disks that were printed using this hp technology but not one of them seemed to present a multicolor spectrum. the ones i saw where i either black and gray or like the one shown in this forum.

    anybody got a clue if this hp can print full range of colors?
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  6. No it cant! (do colour) it does very high quality grayscale .
    Corned beef is now made to a higher standard than at any time in history.
    The electronic components of the power part adopted a lot of Rubycons.
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