HardwareLogic
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now. There are 12 people online (0 Friends).
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Forum
  • UCP
  • Shop@HL
You are at HardwareLogic » Articles » Reviews Index » Lite-On External USB 8x LabelTag DVDRW eNAU608-111

Lite-On External USB 8x LabelTag DVDRW eNAU608-111

Author
Aron Schatz
Posted
February 21, 2011
Manufacturer
Lite-On
Product Page
eNAU608
Views
75020
Lite-On External USB 8x LabelTag DVDRW eNAU608-111
The eNAU608 combines the media compatibility of the less expensive eNAU108 model with addition features for personalization and data side labeling.
Tags Reviews Storage USB Optical DVDRW Lite-On External eNAU608

Page 5: Testing, Conclusion

Testing

Remember that this drive isn't targeted at the performance market. We are here to test how well the drive works in the intended use cases and since this is a value segment drive, we through value media at it. Actually, that's all we buy. Like the eNAU108, this model proved that inexpensive doesn't mean cheap. The drive won't be winning any contests for speed, but that's not the point. As long as the eNAU608 burns reliably, it is fine in our book. All the data we burned was read without issue.

label.jpg


We also had to test the new LabelTag feature of the drive. LightScribe has been done and gone, but LabelTag allows you to put a label on the data side of the disk. The process is pretty simple. Once the data is burned to the disk, the drive then calculates how much space is left for a label. Using this space, the drive burns the label "pattern" as a normal burn process. The result is that your disk has an unmistakable imprint on the data side telling you what it is. This is great for archiving. There are a few drawbacks. The first is shown in the picture. The contrast you get from some dyes will not be that good. You can see it, but it is faint and you need to hold it a certain way to get it. This is a plain CD-R. No special media is required

labeldvd.jpg


DVD+R media shows up a bit easier. We didn't burn too much data to this disk, but if you fill up the disk entirely, you won't be able to put a label on it. It is actually eating into the usable data space of the disk. A large label like the one we put is using a couple of GB on the disk. The software also doesn't allow the use of RW disks. It only allows write once and then closes the disk after writing the label. We'd be interested to see if the RW disk is still usable after going through the LabelTag process. We don't see why it wouldn't be.

The Nero software that was packaged with the drive worked with Windows AND Linux. Included on the CD is the Nero For Linux Version 4. This is a welcomed sight to see companies package in software for Linux. Unfortunately, Nero for Linux works fine for doing the majority of the burn tasks, but to get LabelTag support, you'll need to use the Windows version. Still, it is nice to see that the Linux version was on the disk.

Conclusion

The eNAU608 retails for a bit under $60 (Amazon Link) at the time of posting. You are really paying a premium over the less expensive sibling, but you are gaining the personalization features and the ability to label the data side of the disks. Remember, this is normal media. You don't need a special disk like for LightScribe. Sure, LabelTag has some drawbacks, but the technology is interesting. For a generic slim drive, we still recommend the eNAU108. Road warriors will probably want to stick with the »eNAU108, as well. If you want the full range of features and the personalization abilities, the eNAU608 is the drive for you.

ASE Publishing would like to thank Lite-On for making this review possible.
« Previous Page  
Page 1
  • Introduction
  • About Lite-On
Page 2
  • Packaging
  • Specifications
  • Marketing Summary
Page 3
  • Package Contents
Page 4
  • eNAU608
Page 5
  • Testing
  • Conclusion
View As Single Page Print This Page Print Entire Article
Related Articles
  • Kingston HyperX MAX 3.0 USB SSD
  • Thermaltake BlacX 5G USB3 Dock ST0019U
  • Lite-On External USB 8x DVDRW eNAU108-111
  • Sans Digital TR5UTP 5-Bay RAID Tower
  • Crucial RealSSD C300 256GB CTFDDAC256MAG-1G1
images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4471lc0.jpg pg1.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4472ltk.jpg pg2.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4473ll0.jpg parts.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4474l6f.jpg faces.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4475li0.jpg iso.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4476lyk.jpg front.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4477lfu.jpg back.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4478lgp.jpg bottom.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4479lb0.jpg ycable.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4480lou.jpg label.jpg images/siteimages/upload/2011/02/17/4481l9u.jpg labeldvd.jpg

Title

Medium Image View Large
Login
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now.
Forgot your password?
Advertisement
Latest News
  • Welcome to the new server
  • Gmail Gets Optional Preview Pane
  • HBO Go on Consoles
  • HP Touchpad Update
  • Happy System Administrator Day!
  • Apple Releases OS X 10.7 Lion
  • More Android Apps Found to be Malware
  • This Weeks News
  • Happy Birthday USA!
  • Windows Phone Gets Angry Birds, Custom Rings Coming To Mango
Latest Articles
  • Cooler Master Storm Enforcer Mid-Tower Gaming Case
  • Antec Six Hundred v2 Gaming Case
  • Crucial Ballistix Smart Tracer 6GB PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664ST1608OB
  • Lite-On External USB 8x LabelTag DVDRW eNAU608-111
  • Kingston HyperX MAX 3.0 USB SSD
  • Thermaltake BlacX 5G USB3 Dock ST0019U
  • Lite-On External USB 8x DVDRW eNAU108-111
  • Sans Digital TR5UTP 5-Bay RAID Tower
  • Thermaltake Armor A60 VM20001W2Z
  • NZXT Phantom Enthusiast Full Tower Case
Advertisement
Affiliate Reviews
  • Kingston HyperX Beast Black 16 GB 2133 C11 (2x8 GB) Review at techPowerUp!
  • Fractal Design Arc Midi R2 Case Review at Pro-Clockers
  • EVGA Introduces SuperNOVA 1300 G2 PSU at Hardware Secrets
  • Faster Acer C7 Chromebook at Walmart for USD 199 at Hardware Secrets
  • Qt 5.1 Release Candidate 1 Has Arrived at Phoronix
  • In-Fighting Continues Over Mir On Non-Unity Ubuntu at Phoronix
  • ASRock Z87 Extreme4 Motherboard at Hardware Secrets
  • Subversion 1.8 Presents New Features at Phoronix
  • MSI GTX 770 Lightning 2 GB Review at techPowerUp!
  • Thermaltake Urban S21 Elegant Mid Tower Review at Pro-Clockers
  • LLVM 3.3 Officially Released at Phoronix
  • LLVM/Clang Now Uses Loop Vectorizer At New Levels at Phoronix
  • Intel GPU Driver Tries To Rip Out FBDEV Support at Phoronix
  • Coreboot Doing AMD USB 3.0, Q35 QEMU Emulation at Phoronix
Press Release
  • Ultratech Ships First Ambient Control Laser Spike Anneal System
  • =?ISO-8859-1?Q?New_truth=AE_Mobile_Game_Graffiti_Collective_Delivers_C?= =?ISO-8859-1?Q?reativity,_Social_Fun_With_A_Side_Of_Health_Education?=
  • Epson Named Official Printer and Paper Partner for Nature's Best Photography Awards for Second Consecutive Year
  • Iowa Farm Family Unleashes BusterBall(TM) -- And The World Will Never Be The Same
  • AT&T and NEC Introduce Ultra-Rugged Smartphone Designed for Hard Work, Real Life
  • Samsung Canada Releases the Hottest Series of the Summer
  • Finesse Solutions Launches Next Generation SmartGlass 3L Bioreactors for Cell Culture and Fermentation
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 Gets Two Sleek and Stylish 2nd Generation WiQiQi Wireless Chargers For Desktop and Car Use
  • Northrop Grumman Delivers Open-Architecture Software Development Kit to Interested Parties Following AMDR Industry Day
  • Entrust First North American CA to Complete Audit for New CA/Browser Forum SSL Baseline Requirements
© 2010 Aron Schatz (ASE Publishing) [Queries: 12 (0 Cached)] [Rows: 198 Fetched: 198] [Page Generation time: 0.45570683479309]