A photo paper which uses DVD Rewritable technology to print extremely crisp monochrome photos. The paper has a dye layer that can be changed from light to dark and back by a high power laser. Whereas DVD labeling/unused space printing uses blank DVDs, this would use special paper (actually plastic in the shape of a photo) and a laser beam. The resolution would be 1 bit 32,000 DPI.-- Amishman35, Oct 30 2006 e-Paper http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-paperMono and polychrome versions available - few commercial applications exist, with the exception of a couple of handheld text-readers from Sony. [zen_tom, Oct 30 2006] Xerox Seeks Erasable Form of Paper for Copiers http://www.nytimes....in&pagewanted=printThe researchers describe the invention as being based on compounds that can change color when they absorb a certain wavelength of light, but can then gradually revert to their original appearance. The compounds currently self-erase in about 16 to 24 hours, or can be erased immediately when heated. [xaviergisz, Nov 27 2006] Scientists Have Invented Paper That You Can Print With Light, Erase With Heat, and Reuse 80 Times https://science.sla...-and-reuse-80-times [xaviergisz, Feb 07 2017] Sounds like you're describing a thermal printer, to me.-- st3f, Oct 30 2006 There's that new lcd paper stuff - and it works without all those lasers - I don't know what the resolution is though.-- zen_tom, Oct 30 2006 kudos, best idea I've read in quite a while.
Because of the ultra-fine resolution, you may also be able to print diffraction patterns and holograms.
However it may be difficult to implement. In a DVD burner the read/write laser only has to move on a single axis. This invention would require fine motor control in 2 axes (assuming you're talking about rectangular media without a big hole in the centre).
Note for searching for similar inventions: printing on the blank space of DVDs with the burner is also known as 'pit art'.-- xaviergisz, Oct 30 2006 Fair point, Ian, but it'd be surprised if laser solutions aren't amongst those being considered in the many possible products that fall under the heading of epaper.-- st3f, Oct 31 2006 Toshiba just annouced the release of this today. "Paper" is reusable 500 times and only costs £5 per sheet.....-- ham_on_a_roll, Nov 27 2006 // reusable 500 times and only costs £5 per sheet..... //
Which works out at GBP£0.01 per print, in 2006.
Current (2017) prices for basic white A4 paper are around GBP£0.005 per sheet.
It would be worth finding out what the current economics are - they might be more favourable by now.-- 8th of 7, Feb 07 2017 random, halfbakery