LightScribe (2004 - 2013) | Museum of Obsolete Media (original) (raw)
LightScribe was a technology introduced by Hewlett-Packard in 2004 that allowed optical drives to laser-etch labels onto compatible media.
As well as a compatible LightScribe enabled drive, LightScribe drivers and suitable disc-burning software that supported LightScribe was required. Finally, a LightScribe compatible disc was needed. After burning data to the disc, the disc is turned over so the label side is face down, and the same laser that burnt data is used to etch the reactive dye coating of the disc.
LightScribe-compatible discs came in the form of CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R and DVD+RW. No Blu-ray discs were LightScribe compatible.
The LightScribe technology could only etch in monochrome, and it was possible for the design to fade over time, especially if the disk was exposed to direct sunlight. Etching a disc took a considerable amount of time; up to 30 minutes for a high-contrast image that filled the radius of the disc.
LightScribe discs are encoded around the centre with a pattern that is read by an extra laser in the drive to work out the disc’s type and position.
As of 2013, the technology was no longer promoted by Hewlett-Packard, but it is possible to obtain the software from elsewhere. Drive manufactures have now ceased making LightScribe enabled optical drives (optical drives in computers are under threat in general).
Sources / Resources
- LightScribe: HP’s Clever Twist on the CD Burner – YouTube
- Lightscribe being phased out?
- Lightscribe Direct Disc Printing explained by cdrom2go.com – YouTube
- Lightscribe Software – Free and Premium Lightscribe Labeling Software | Home | LightScribe software, hardware, media and support
- LightScribe – Wikipedia

