by Martin Brinkmann on May 01, 2010 in Hardware - Last Update: February 24, 2014 - 5 comments
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Lightscribe is a disc printing technology that many modern CD and DVD burners support. The easiest way to detect if the burner supports the technology is to look at the logos displayed on the front panel of the burner. If you see the Lightscribe logo printed on it there, it is supported.
Lightscribe allows you to print designs directly on the upper side of a CD and DVD. The advantage of this method is that it does not use ink but laser etching.
A compatible DVD burner is one component that is needed. The other two are a recordable disc that supports Lightscribe as well plus a Lightscribe driver and a DVD burning software or CD labeling program supporting Lightscribe.
That sounds like a lot of requirements. The Lightscribe driver that is needed can be downloaded from the official website for Windows, Linux and Macintosh systems. The download is labeled LIGHTSCRIBE SYSTEM SOFTWARE (LSS).
You also need to buy media that is supporting the Lightscribe technology.
LightScribe CDs and DVDs have a special coating that interacts with the laser in your LightScribe-enabled disc drive. You must use LightScribe CDs and DVDs in order to burn a label onto your discs.
Lightscribe DVDs start at about 0,30 Dollar or Euro a piece which is a little bit more than one would pay for standard media. The Lightscribe discs have the same Lightscribe logo on their covers.
The last part that is needed is a Lightscribe software that can process the disc surface to apply the design. A free software program that supports Lightscribe is CD Burner XP.
The process would then look like the following:
Put the Lightscribe disc into the Lightscribe compatible CD or DVD burner.
Burn the data as usual.
Turn over the disk so that the program can etch the design on the upper side of the CD or DVD.
Lightscribe obviously has to be configured in the software program. Designs can be created individually or downloaded from the official design center or other resources. Additional labeling programs are linked in the download section of the Lightscribe website.
Lightscribe software might not work sometimes as expected. HP has created a Lightscribe Diagnostic software that can be used to analyse the Lightscribe functionality on a system in detail. The Lightscribe System Software needs to be installed on the computer system before the diagnostics tool can be used.
The troubleshooting application can be used to detect software settings, compatible drives and media, check the event log, error files and look up error codes directly in the software.
Have you used the Lightscribe technology before? What was your experience with it?
Update: The official Lightscribe website has been shut down more or less. Most CD and DVD burners that you buy should come with software that installs support for it on your system.
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Windows 7 / Burning software program doesn't recognize the drive (check cables, enable SATA drive in Bios)
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Burning software see the drive, but does not recognize the blank disc you inserted ? (try another or NEGATIVE DVD-R disc instread)
after re-reading this, it probably doesn't like that brand or make of blank media you are trying, try another brand or go back to the verbatim.
Keyword : DL. is your drive a Dual Layer drive? Single layer drives do not like DL blanks
I used to know a guy who worked at a CDR factory. He said the really cheap ones are 'warped' or don't cool flat. Basically the disc is a 'taco shell' or 'potato chip' on a micro level. The laser basically has to re-focus like 50 times per disc revolution and it will end up burning out your laser assembly motors permaturely with all the extra work. Think of it as trying to burn an ant with a magnifing glass only the ant keeps bobbing up and down.