Am I the only one that bought a printer for $100 that prints in full-color, full-resolution on white discs that cost about the same as not-white discs? I don't understand what the appeal of these are? Because it's shiny?
The appeal is not having to use ink, not needing a seperate printer at all, and never having to worry about your image fading or rubbing off. I have one of those printers, the disks are more expensive, nearly as much as light scribe is now and they are a pain to use in comparison.
I even have light scribe on my laptop, I went over to my sisters on mothers day and burned her a disk with a bunch of pictures on it, then flipped the disk over and burned our family photo on the other side of the disk. It was quick, easy and very nice, not something I could have done at all with my cd printer unless I brough my luggage.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Bean @ Feb 14th 2006 5:45PM
Am I the only one that bought a printer for $100 that prints in full-color, full-resolution on white discs that cost about the same as not-white discs? I don't understand what the appeal of these are? Because it's shiny?
pcphantom @ Jun 16th 2008 8:23PM
The appeal is not having to use ink, not needing a seperate printer at all, and never having to worry about your image fading or rubbing off. I have one of those printers, the disks are more expensive, nearly as much as light scribe is now and they are a pain to use in comparison.
I even have light scribe on my laptop, I went over to my sisters on mothers day and burned her a disk with a bunch of pictures on it, then flipped the disk over and burned our family photo on the other side of the disk. It was quick, easy and very nice, not something I could have done at all with my cd printer unless I brough my luggage.