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Professor Koon ISE 370 Barcodes
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Code Reading Technology Original Barcode Readers Contact Wand
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Code Reading Technology Non-Contact Scanner How a checkout scanner works Optoelectronics: Optical Image to electrical Signals
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Code Reading Technology Non-Contact Scanner
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Code Reading Technology
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Professor Koon ISE 370 BarCode History Grocery stores need for a system to automatically read items at checkout Increase Productivity Reduce Human Error Silver, Woodland and Johanson 1948 Drexel Institute of Technology Students 1949 First patent for “Classifying Apparatus and Method” Linear “Bulls-eye” Image: http://www.ournewhaven.org.uk/images/uploaded/scaled/Shop_s.jpghttp://www.ournewhaven.org.uk/images/uploaded/scaled/Shop_s.jpg
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Standardization “Without the advancements involving lasers and microchips, the development of the Universal Product Code and the dream of an automated checkout would not have been possible.” – Marvin L. Mann
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Professor Koon ISE 370 UCC >> First BarCode (1974)
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UPC – Universal Product Code 12 Digits (6 ID, 5 item, 1 check) Symbology is a standard that defines the printed symbol. How scanners should read and decode the symbol. Professor Koon ISE 370
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Decode Barcode Black Bars with White Bars Between Thinnest Bar = 1 unit wide All Bars 1 to 4 units wide Start (L) is 1-1-1 (B-W-B) Final ( R) is 1-1-1 (B-W-B) All Digits add to 7 widths Professor Koon ISE 370
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UPC Barcode How to read a standard 12 decimal digit code DigitPatternDigitPattern 0000110150110001 1001100160101111 2001001170111011 3011110180110111 4010001190001011
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Professor Koon ISE 370 How To Read a Barcode
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Check Digit (UPC Code) Add all digits in Odd positions Multiply sum results by 3 Add all digits in Even positions Add 3x Odd sum to Even sum This sum plus check digit must be a multiple of 10. (e.g. 110) Try 63938200039 Professor Koon ISE 370
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Different Types of Barcodes Other most commonly used codes: UPC-A, UPC-E, and UPC Supplemental EAN-13 (13 Digits: One for Flag) Code 39 (US Military 1981) Interleaved 2 of 5 Code 128 (Alphanumeric) Two-Dimensional (Stacked, Multi-row)
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Interleaved 2 of 5 Numbers Only Long as Necessary Check Digit is optional Digit is encoded in the bars Next digit is encoded in the spaces Start >> NB-NS-NB-NS Data = five bars each Stop >> WB-NS-NB Professor Koon ISE 370
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Number Pattern 2 of 5 0 >> NNWWN 1 >> WNNNW 2 >> NWNNW 3 >> WWNNN 4 >> NNWNW 5 >> WNWNN 6 >> NWWNN 7 >> NNNWW 8 >> WNNWN 9 >> NWNWN Professor Koon ISE 370
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Different Types of Barcodes American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) Coding Standard
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Different Types of Barcodes >> Linear or Matrix (2D) Code 39 A symbology that can encode uppercase letters (A through Z), digits (0 through 9) and a handful of special characters like the $ sign. Military Usage Drawbacks Low Data Density Requires More Space
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Different Types of Barcodes Code 128 A very high-density barcode symbology Used extensively world wide in shipping and packaging industries Can encode all 128 characters of ASCII
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CODE 49 Professor Koon ISE 370
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Code 49 2 to 8 rows stacked Cross between UPC & Code 39 Developed in 1987 Intermec Corp. Modified Scanner Needed Professor Koon ISE 370
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Different Types of Barcodes Data Matrix A 2D matrix barcode consisting of black and white “cells” or “modules” arranged in either a square or rectangular pattern. Most common in marking small items (as small as 2-3mm 2 ) Pack a lot of information in a very small space. Stores between 1 to 500 characters. Can scale down to 1 mil square. (500 million characters per inch).
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Aztec Code Professor Koon ISE 370 Design for ease of printing & ease of decoding Square central bullseye finder. Smallest 15 x 15 modules. Largest 151 x 151 modules. 1995 by Welch Allyn Inc.
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3D Barcode (Bumpy) Small circular symbols Shiny, curved metal surfaces Professor Koon ISE 370
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SuperCode In public domain. Invented in 1994. Packet structure (multi-row). Greater freedom in placing packets. 32 error correction levels. Professor Koon ISE 370
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Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) No contact of line of sight Active or Passive Tags (See note sheet) Electromagnetic Waves Active tags contain a battery and can transmit signals autonomously. Passive have no battery and require an external source to provoke signal Transmission. Cost under ¢10 Implementation into cell phones
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Professor Koon ISE 31227 8/16/2015 Standardization Problems with standardizing new technology Will Barcodes Prove to be Economic? IBM proposed designed by George J. Laurer 12 Decimal Digit code -SLLLLLLMRRRRRRE (S) Start – Bit pattern of 101 (L) Left – 7 Bit pattern (M) Middle – Bit pattern of 01010 known as guard bars (R) Right – 7 Bit pattern (E) End – Bit pattern of 101
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Professor Koon ISE 31228 8/16/2015 What is a Barcode? 1 A bar code (also barcode) is an optical machine readable representation of data. Originally, bar codes represented data in the widths (lines) and the spacings of parallel lines and may be referred to as linear or 1D barcodes or symbologies. Now they also come in patterns of squares, dots, hexagons and other geometric patterns within images termed 2D matrix codes or symbologies. 1 Image and Definition: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barcodehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barcode
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Professor Koon ISE 370 Questions?
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