Talk:LightScribe
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[edit] Resolution
I am curious as to how high-resolution this is. The pitch of the tracks in a DVD is very fine, so this technique should be extremely capable speaking of resolution strictly. Maybe somewhat hampered by the curvature of the printed lines though? Not sure how well the adjacent circles will really match up though, they probably match up much worse than the in-track dots do.... Otoh inkjets have a very high resolution aswell but I think a DVD laser easily bests them
[edit] Just tidying up.
This article, although it's a stub, is poorly written for an encyclopedia article, and contains information that actually constitutes a new article.
I'm going to move the "Improving Image Quality" section to another article, "LightScribe Image Quality."
Unfortunately, I don't know enough about the technology to really write an article, but I'll do my best throughout the evening and see where it all ends up.
I am not the original author of this article. But I have experience with articles that aren't up to par (having tried to write a few of them), so I'll try to get it right, this time.
[edit] Changes...
Removed "stub" because this article seems complete enough so that it is no longer a stub, added categories.
[edit] Optical disc authoring technology
I've added a section to Optical disc authoring technology (a new article) of which this is now the "main section" -- please expand that paragraph as appropriate. —Quarl (talk) 2006-01-15 12:24Z
IS this even "authoring"? The authoring article refers to data, not labeling discs, which this essentially is. Alvis 20:40, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Out of Place Sentences.
Because the labels are laser-etched--not printed--there's no ink, no smudging, and no peeling. Your labels can be whatever you want them to be. Create one-of-a-kind designs with your own photos, text, and artwork using your label-making software. Or choose from the many free backgrounds the software provides.
These sentences look like they're trying to sell you LightScribe rather than tell you what it is. I won't remove it myself, though, I'll just give my opinion. --CCFreak2K 08:02, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
- Removed. 216.167.244.113 22:43, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] missing date
When was lightscribe invented? or when it was released to the public? Please add this information to the article MarioV 04:39, 5 February 2007 (UTC)