Joe - yes, for that LightScribe stuff - I believe it's a special
LightScribe disc that must be used in order for it to work.

-K-

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Joe Yoder
Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 4:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [NF] Special purpose CD/DVD drive

Yes Kurt - reading the existing label is the top priority.  I mentioned
a
secondary use that would be addressed by LightScribe but I think a
special type of media is required for that technology.  Since the discs
will come from all over, I will need to choose a technique that will
work
for types.

Thanks for your input,

Joe

On Monday, January 17, 2011  2:58 PM, Kurt Wendt wrote:
>
>Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 14:58:52 -0500
>From: Kurt Wendt
>To: [email protected]
>cc:
>Subject: RE: [NF] Special purpose CD/DVD drive
>
>Kevin - I was originally thinking of LightScribe as well. However, I
>think what Joe wants is the REVERSE of your suggestion. Not to Write a
>Label on a Disc - but, rather - for the drive to LOOK at the Label that
>is Already on the Disc - which is Within a Drive! Does that makes
>sense???
>
>-K-
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]
>On Behalf Of Kevin Cully
>Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 2:52 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: [NF] Special purpose CD/DVD drive
>
>I think what you might be looking for is a "lightscribe" burner.
>http://j.mp/gmCC6n
>
>Of course, a sharpie works pretty well too.  I'd avoid the stickers for
>the balance reason you specified.
>
>-Kevin
>
>
>
>On 01/17/2011 02:29 PM, Joe Yoder wrote:
>> Does anyone happen to know of an optical disc reader with the ability
>to produce a visual image of the label on the CD/DVD/BlueRay media
>mounted on the drive?  My attempts at Goggling for this have not turned
>anything up but I suspect that someone with more experience may have
>better results.
>>
>> My application is a database storing information about each disc
>stored in a disc store.  In addition to manually entered basic field
>information, incorporating an image of the label will be simpler than
>transcribing all label text into fields in the database.  Including
>label images will allow a retrieval user to make a selection from a
>screen of thumbnail images rather than via a text search.
>>
>> Another approach would be to setup a dedicated camera to take a
>picture of the label and have it be stored at the time the disc is
added
>to the store.  I suspect the Microsoft CDs with holograms will be
>difficult to photograph - probably to scan as well.  It seems that a
>drive designed for the purpose would be the nicest way to go if there
is
>one available at an affordable price.
>>
>> Since I am probably dreaming already I may as well request the
>capability of adding an ID number to the label while the disc is
>mounted.  This would be an Id specific to the database in which the
disc
>is to be stored.  I have been assuming a small self adhesive label
>applied over the top of the disc label but realize that this may create
>balance problems.
>>
>> Thanks in advance for any input,
>>
>> Joe
>>
>>
>> --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts ---
>> multipart/alternative
>>    text/plain (text body -- kept)
>>    text/html
>> ---
>>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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