On Tue, 05 Jan 2010 15:54:36 -0800 Bob McGowan <bob_mcgo...@symantec.com> dijo:
>>> John Jason Jordan wrote: >>>> I still want to be able to put an image on a CD or DVD, but I guess >>>> the only way to do that properly is with an inkjet. But if I do it >>>> only once every few months I'll have clogged jets, wasted ink from >>>> cleaning, and constant headaches. >> If there was an inexpensive color laser printer that would do optical >> media that would be great. >The only way I know to get a color image on the back of a CD/DVD is to >use an Inkjet printer that can feed the disk through the print >mechanism. >I know these are available and I expect it is what Paul was referring >to, and what you mentioned a couple of posts ago regarding clogging >jets. >Unfortunately, there's no other way I know of to get a color print on >the disk. My desktop computer has two Lightscribe DVD drives. I paid extra for them hoping that they would do what I want, but since they are grayscale only, the Lighscribe feature remains virtually unused. (Although I did get them working back when I was running Ubuntu - and I'm sure they can be made to work under Debian as well.) My motivation is different from what most people want. I want to make distro CDs and OpenOffice.org CDs that look official. I am a university student and quite often I encounter students who are interested in FOSS, especially OOo. In the past I have given them a CD with the software on it, only to discover that they never installed it. Following up I discovered that the reason they never installed it is from fear. Windows users are terrified of malware, and they know nothing and trust even less. If I had a CD that looked like an official install CD it would really help. You have no idea how computer illiterate today's university students are. Here is a recent exchange: Grad student: I've heard about Linux and I want to try it. Me: No problem. Here is a live CD of Ubuntu. Grad student: Oh, I can do it now. I can't install any more programs because my husband used up all the memory. I have to wait until I can afford to get a new computer with more memory. I am not making this up. And I can add that professors are not a whole lot more savvy. I have discovered that getting them to Linux is too big a step for most. But getting them to install OOo is much more doable. Once they get comfortable with OOo I have a better chance of nudging them to go all the way to Linux. But they're too scared to install OOo from a CD scribbled on with a sharpie. And, curiously, the OOo organization does not sell CDs with OOo on them. (Why?) I can get them commercially, but the cost is too high. Hence my desire to make pretty CDs. In fact, there are places at the university where I could make a cardboard stand with CDs in it and a big poster explaining what it's all about. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org