Well... almost anyway... You can do it in the same drive but not at the same time... It uses the same dynamic laser control schematic that the Yamaha F1 used to use. The F1 with it's DiscT@2 (Disc Tattoo) would either burn your data with a dynamic allocation to create monochrome images out of the burn pattern. or if you only burned a few megs of data you could burn blank data where ever else to make the designs. It was terribly cool but easy to overlook (and hard to see depending on the dye your disc manufacturer used). I always used the Taiyo Yuden discs with the deep blue dye so it usually came out pretty nice. The HP (and soon-to-be third-party) drives are doing the same thing except you insert the disc upside-down and the laser sears a sepia colored ink turning it black. You could use a Yamaha F1 to burn a LightScribe label as well if the Yamaha would let you burn to an upside-down disc... I tried it but "no disc" was found. Right now the only manufacturer making the discs in large quantity is Verbatim (they make the "HP" branded LightScribe discs). It is very cool and HP looks like they're gonna push it really hard, I honestly hope it catches on but if it doesn't I can keep using my Epson R200 to print full color labels directly onto my Taiyo Yudens. ~Krelian