Lightscribe drives come in IDE and SATA
Lightscribe drives will come with their own software CD, which should include a lightscribe burning utility.
Lightscribe labels will never replace the "look" of the labels you are now making. They are monocolor, and about half the contrast of what you would expect.
To make a lightscribe label, you put the disk in the drive upside down. Lightscribe uses the laser in the drive to burn an image into the colored layer of your disc.
If your discs are gold colored, the lightscribe image will be two toned: the gold color and a half-black color (more like a dark gray)
I find them suitable for identifying disks, but they are not colorful enough to do much more than that.
You can print a two-toned image onto the disk, but that's about it.
Other folks may have different experiences.
rogerX
--- In simplycomputers2@yahoogroups.com, Tidings <tidings_@...> wrote:
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> I am still an old fashioned, making CD/DV labels through the old LABEL STICKER.
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> Since now we have the Lightscribe method.
> My understanding is I need?:
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> -Lightscribe CD/DVD drive
> -Lightscribe Media such as CD/DVD discs
> -Lightscribe Software such as in NERO and other software.
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> Question:
> Do I need all of the above 3 to make a proper -Lightscribe labels?
> Does the -Lightscribe DRIVE come in IDE form and SATA form?
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> Please bear with me.
> Thanks
> Fred
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