If I remember right, the Lightscribe feature used the same laser to burn (print) the label on the other side. Even the last editions of such disc drives took something like 40 minutes per disc if you wanted something with detail, and about a minute for text that was still not as easy to read as the old sharpie method.
After some digging on the interwebs, apparently LightScribe was a HP feature, and it needed special LightScribe CD-R/DVD-Rs to work. I'd never heard of it until I got this drive. And like everyone else back in the day I just used a marker pen to write my CD/DVD labels.
I originally bought a CD/DVD drive last year, really because of some things that I wanted were not available via streaming.
I can understand wanting to get rid of a printer (because seriously, eff the business model around those things); I just don't think this was the best way to go about that.
I absolutely still need a printer, mainly for the homework handouts for my students. And two years ago, I needed to print my own boarding passes for Ryanair, otherwise I'd be charged €/£55 at the check-in. Same with Ukraine Airlines, I had to print my own board passes. Although I'm not likely to be flying with that airline again. Cheap flights Beijing to London via Kiev.
Chinese airlines, I can have an app on my smart-phone as the boarding pass. That's another reason why I don't rock old Android phone for daily use.
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