| |
History
The first patent for a bar code type product (US Patent #2,612,994) was issued to inventors Joseph Woodland
and Bernard Silver on October 7, 1952. Its implementation was made
possible through the work of Raymond Alexander and Frank Stietz, two
engineers with Sylvania
(who were also granted a patent), as a result of their work on a system
to identify railroad cars. It was not until 1966 that barcodes were put
to commercial use and they were not commercially successful until the
1980s.
While traditionally barcode encoding schemes represented only
numbers, newer symbologies add new characters such as uppercase
letters, or even the complete ASCII
character set. The drive to encode more information in combination with
the space requirements of simple barcodes led to the development of
matrix codes (a type of 2D barcode), which do not consist of bars but rather a grid of square cells. Stacked barcodes
are a compromise between true 2D barcodes and linear codes (also known
as 1D barcodes), and are formed by taking a traditional linear
symbology and placing it in an envelope that allows multiple rows.

Use
Since their invention in the 20th century, barcodes — especially the UPC
— have slowly become an essential part of modern civilization. Their
use is widespread, and the technology behind barcodes is constantly
improving. Some modern applications of barcodes include:
- Practically every item purchased from a department store,
and mass merchandiser has a barcode on it. This greatly helps in
keeping track of the large number of items in a store and also reduces
instances of shoplifting
(since shoplifters could no longer easily switch price tags from a
lower-cost item to a higher-priced one). Since the adoption of
barcodes, both consumers and retailers have benefited from the savings
generated.
- Document Management tools often allow for barcoded sheets to facilitate the separation and indexing of documents that have been imaged in batch scanning applications.
- The tracking of item movement, including rental cars, airline luggage, nuclear waste, mail and parcels.
- Recently, researchers have placed tiny barcodes on individual bees to track the insects' mating habits.
- Many tickets now have barcodes that need to be validated before
allowing the holder to enter sports arenas, cinemas, theatres,
fairgrounds, transportation etc.
- Used on automobiles, can be located on front or back.

Universal Product Code (UPC)
-
The best-known and most widespread use of barcodes has been on
consumer products. The UPC symbol is a response to a business need
first identified by the US grocery industry in the early 1970s.
Believing that automating the grocery checkout process could reduce
labor costs, improve inventory control, speed up the process, and
improve customer service, six industry associations, representing both
product manufacturers and supermarkets, created an industry wide
committee of industry leaders. Their two-year effort resulted in the
announcement of the Universal Product Code and the U.P.C. barcode
symbol on April 1, 1973. The UPC Symbol that was chosen by the committee was a modified version of a symbol design that was submitted by IBM. IBM also designed five versions of the UPC symbology for future industry requirements — UPC A, B, C, D, and E. The U.P.C. made its first commercial appearance at the Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio in June 1974.
Originally, the modern day bar code was developed to identify
railroad cars. However, a toll bridge in New Jersey requested that a
similar system be developed so that it could quickly scan for cars that
had paid for a monthly pass. Then the U.S. Post Office requested that a
similar system be developed so that it could keep track of which trucks
had entered the yard and when. These applications required special
retroreflective labels. Finally, KalKan dog food asked the Sylvania
team to develop a simpler (and cheaper) version which they could put on
cases of dog food for inventory control. This, in turn, led to the
grocery industry's interest.
Economic studies conducted for the grocery industry committee
projected over $40 million in savings to the industry from scanning by
the mid-1970s. Those numbers were not achieved in that time frame and
there were those who predicted the demise of barcode scanning. The
usefulness of the barcode required the adoption of expensive scanners
by a critical mass of retailers while manufacturers simultaneously
adopted barcode labels. Neither wanted to move first and results
weren't promising for the first couple of years, with Business Week
proclaiming "The Supermarket Scanner That Failed."

Symbologies
The mapping between messages and barcodes is called a symbology.
The specification of a symbology includes the encoding of the single
digits/characters of the message as well as the start and stop markers
into bars and space, the size of the quiet zone required to be before
and after the barcode as well as the computation of a checksum.
Linear symbologies can be classified mainly by two properties:
- Continuous vs. discrete: Characters in continuous symbologies
usually abut, with one character ending with a space and the next
beginning with a bar, or vice versa. Characters in discrete symbologies
begin and end with bars; the intercharacter space is ignored, as long
as it is not wide enough to look like the code ends.
- Two-width vs. many-width: Bars and spaces in two-width symbologies
are wide or narrow; how wide a wide bar is exactly has no significance
as long as the symbology requirements for wide bars are adhered to
(usually two to three times more wide than a narrow bar). Bars and
spaces in many-width symbologies are all multiples of a basic width
called the module; most such codes use four widths of 1, 2, 3 and 4 modules.
Some symbologies use interleaving.
The first character is encoded using black bars of varying width. The
second character is then encoded, by varying the width of the white
spaces between these bars. Thus characters are encoded in pairs over
the same section of the barcode. Interleaved 2 of 5 is an example of this.
Stacked symbologies consist of a given linear symbology repeated vertically in multiple.
There is a large variety of 2-D symbologies. The most common are
matrix codes, which feature square or dot-shaped modules arranged on a
grid pattern. 2-D symbologies also come in a variety of other visual
formats. Aside from circular patterns, there are several 2-D
symbologies which employ steganography by hiding an array of different-sized or -shaped modules within a user-specified image (for example, DataGlyphs).

Scanner/symbology interaction
Linear symbologies are optimized to be read by a laser scanner,
which sweeps a beam of light across the barcode in a straight line,
reading a slice of the bar code light-dark patterns. In the
1990s development of CCD imagers to read bar codes was pioneered by
Welch Allyn. Imaging does not require moving parts, like a laser
scanner does. In 2007, linear imaging is surpassing laser scanning as
the preferred scan engine for its performance and durability.
Stacked symbologies are also optimized for laser scanning, with the laser making multiple passes across the barcode.
2-D symbologies cannot be read by a laser as there is typically no
sweep pattern that can encompass the entire symbol. They must be
scanned by a camera capture device.

Scanners (barcode readers)
-
The earliest, and still the cheapest, barcode scanners are built from a fixed light and a single photosensor that is manually "scrubbed" across the barcode.

Verifier (Pika inspection)
Barcode verifiers are primarily used by businesses that print
barcodes, but any trading partner in the supply chain could test
barcode quality. It is important to "grade" a barcode to ensure that
any scanner in the supply chain can read the barcode. Retailers levy
large fines and penalties for non-compliant barcodes.
Barcode verifiers work in a way similar to a scanner but instead of
simply decoding a barcode, a verifier performs a series of eight tests.
Each test is given a grade from 0.0 to 4.0 (F to A) and the lowest of
any of the tests is the scan grade. For most applications a 2.5 (C)
grade is the minimum acceptable grade.
Barcode Verifier Standards
- The original U.S. barcode quality specification was ANSI X3.182. UPC Codes used in the US ANSI/UCC5.
- The current international barcode quality specification is ISO/IEC 15416 (linear bar codes) and ISO/IEC 15415 (2D barcodes)
- The European Standard EN 1635 has been withdrawn and replaced by ISO/IEC 15416
- Barcode verifiers should comply with the ISO 15426-1 (linear
barcode verifier compliance standard) or ISO 15426-2 (2d barcode
verifier compliance standard)
Barcode Verifier Manufacturers (partial list)
- Code Corporation (linear and 2D)
- RJS/Printronix (linear)
- Hand Held Products (linear)
- Webscan (linear and 2D)
- Auto ID Solutions (2D)
- Stratix (linear)
- Axicon (linear)
- REA Elektronik GmbH (linear)
- Siemens (UID, Data Matrix(2D), linear)
Barcode Verifier Test Code Manufacturers ((traceable reflectance and linear measure) used to check proper function of verifiers)
- Applied Image Inc. (Rochester, NY, USA)

Benefits
In point-of-sale management, the use of barcodes can provide very
detailed up-to-date information on key aspects of the business,
enabling decisions to be made much more quickly and with more
confidence. For example:
- Fast-selling items can be identified quickly and automatically reordered to meet consumer demand,
- Slow-selling items can be identified, preventing a build-up of unwanted stock,
- The effects of repositioning a given product within a store can be
monitored, allowing fast-moving more profitable items to occupy the
best space,
- Historical data can be used to predict seasonal fluctuations very accurately.
- Items may be repriced on the shelf to reflect both sale prices and price increases.
Besides sales and inventory tracking, barcodes are very useful in shipping/receiving/tracking.
- When a manufacturer packs a box with any given item, a Unique Identifying Number (UID) can be assigned to the box.
- A relational database can be created to relate the UID to relevant
information about the box; such as order number, items packed, qty
packed, final destination, etc…
- The information can be transmitted through a communication system
such as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) so the retailer has the
information about a shipment before it arrives.
- Tracking results when shipments are sent to a Distribution Center (DC) before being forwarded to the final destination.
- When the shipment gets to the final destination, the UID gets
scanned, and the store knows where the order came from, what's inside
the box, and how much to pay the manufacturer.
The reason bar codes are business friendly is that bar code scanners
are relatively low cost and extremely accurate – only about 1/100,000
entries will be wrong.[citation needed]

Types of barcodes
Linear barcodes
| Symbology |
Cont/Disc |
Two/Many |
Uses |
| Plessey |
Continuous |
Two |
Catalogs, store shelves, inventory |
| U.P.C. |
Continuous |
Many |
Worldwide retail, GS1 approved |
| Codabar |
Discrete |
Two |
Old format used in libraries, blood banks, airbills |
| Code 25 – Non-interleaved 2 of 5 |
Continuous |
Two |
Industrial (NO) |
| Code 25 – Interleaved 2 of 5 |
Continuous |
Two |
Wholesale, Libraries (NO) |
| Code 39 |
Discrete |
Two |
Various |
| Code 93 |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| Code 128 |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| Code 128A |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| Code 128B |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| Code 128C |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| Code 11 |
Discrete |
Two |
Telephones |
| CPC Binary |
Discrete |
Two |
Post office |
| DUN 14 |
Continuous |
Many |
Various |
| EAN 2 |
|
Many |
Addon code (Magazines), GS1 approved |
| EAN 5 |
Continuous |
Many |
Addon code (Books), GS1 approved |
| EAN 8, EAN 13 |
Continuous |
Many |
Worldwide retail, GS1 approved |
| GS1-128 (formerly known as UCC/EAN-128), incorrectly referenced as EAN 128 and UCC 128 |
Continuous |
Many |
Various, GS1 approved |
| GS1 DataBar formerly Reduced Space Symbology (RSS) |
Continuous |
Many |
Various, GS1 approved |
| ITF-14 |
Continuous |
Many |
Non-retail packaging levels, GS1 approved |
| Latent image barcode |
Neither |
Tall/short |
Color print film |
| Pharmacode |
Neither |
Two |
Pharmaceutical Packaging |
| PLANET |
Continuous |
Tall/short |
United States Postal Service |
| POSTNET |
Continuous |
Tall/short |
United States Postal Service |
| OneCode |
Continuous |
Tall/short |
United States Postal Service, replaces POSTNET and PLANET symbols |
| MSI |
Continuous |
Two |
Used for warehouse shelves and inventory |
| PostBar |
Discrete |
Many |
Post office |
| RM4SCC / KIX |
Continuous |
Tall/short |
Royal Mail / Royal TPG Post |
| Telepen |
Continuous |
Two |
Libraries, etc (UK) |

2D barcodes
|
A matrix code, also known as a 2D barcode or simply a 2D code,
is a two-dimensional way of representing information. It is similar to
a linear (1-dimensional) barcode, but has more data representation
capability.
| Symbology |
Notes |
| 3-DI |
Developed by Lynn Ltd. |
| ArrayTag |
From ArrayTech Systems. |
| Aztec Code |
Designed by Andrew Longacre at Welch Allyn (now Hand Held Products). Public domain. |
| Small Aztec Code |
Space-saving version of Aztec code. |
| bCODE |
An SMS text code sent to mobile devices and read photographically. |
| Bullseye |
The barcode tested in a Kroger store in Cincinnati. It used concentric bars. |
| Chromatic Alphabet |
an artistic proposal; uses 26 different color hues |
| Chromocode |
uses black, white, and 4 saturated colors. |
| Codablock |
Stacked 1D barcodes. |
| Code 1 |
Public domain. |
| Code 16K |
Based on 1D Code 128. |
| Code 49 |
Stacked 1D barcodes from Intermec Corp. |
| ColorCode |
ColorZip developed colour barcodes that can be read by camera phones from TV screens; mainly used in Korea. |
| CP Code |
From CP Tron, Inc. |
| d-touch |
readable when printed on deformable gloves and stretched and distorted |
| DataGlyphs |
From Palo Alto Research Center (also known as Xerox PARC). See http://www.dataglyphs.com for details. |
| Datamatrix |
From RVSI Acuity CiMatrix/Siemens. Believed to be public domain, but this status is being challenged. |
| Datastrip Code |
From Datastrip, Inc. |
| Dot Code A |
Designed for the unique identification of items. |
| EZcode |
Designed for decoding by cameraphones. http://www.scanbuy.com |
| High Capacity Color Barcode |
Developed by Microsoft; licensed by ISAN-IA. |
| HueCode |
From Robot Design Associates. Uses greyscale or colour. |
| INTACTA.CODE |
From INTACTA Technologies, Inc. |
| InterCode |
From Iconlab, Inc.
The standard 2D barcode in South Korea. All 3 South Korean mobile
carriers put the scanner program of this code into their handsets to
access mobile internet, as a default embedded program. |
| MaxiCode |
Used by United Parcel Service. Now Public Domain |
| mCode |
Developed by Nextcode Corporation specifically for camera phone
scanning applications. Designed to enable advanced cell mobile
applications with standard camera phones. |
| MiniCode |
From Omniplanar, Inc. |
| PDF417 |
Originated by Symbol Technologies Public Domain. The most common 2D barcode[citation needed]. |
| Micro PDF417 |
Facilitates codes too small to be used in PDF417. |
| PDMark |
Developed by Ardaco. |
| PaperDisk |
High density code — used both for data heavy applications (10K-1
MB) and camera phones (50+ bits). Developed and patented by Cobblestone
Software |
| Optar |
Developed by Twibright Labs and published as free software. Aims at
maximum data storage density, for storing data on paper. 200kB per A4
page with laser printer. |
| QR Code |
Developed, patented and owned by TOYOTA subsidiary Denso Wave
initially for car parts management. Now public domain. Can encode
Japanese Kanji and Kana characters, music, images, URLs, emails.
De-facto standard for Japanese cell phones. |
| Semacode |
A Data Matrix code used to encode URLs for applications using cellular phones with cameras. |
| SmartCode |
From InfoImaging Technologies. |
| Snowflake Code |
From Marconi Data Systems, Inc. |
| ShotCode |
Circular barcodes for camera phones by OP3. Originally from High Energy Magic Ltd in name Spotcode. Before that probably known as TRIPCode. |
| SuperCode |
Public domain. |
| Trillcode |
From Lark Computers. Designed to work with mobile devices camera or webcam PC. Can encode a variety of "actions". |
| UltraCode |
Black-and-white & colour versions. Public domain. Invented by Jeffrey Kaufman and Clive Hohberger. |
| UnisCode |
also called "Beijing U Code"; a colour 2D barcode developed by Chinese company UNIS |
| VeriCode, VSCode |
From Veritec, Inc. |
| WaterCode |
High-density 2D Barcode(440 Bytes/cm2) From MarkAny Inc. |
|

This piece of 35mm film shows two different 2D barcodes used in film: Dolby Digital (between the sprocket holes with the "Double-D" logo in the middle) and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound (in the blue area to the left of the sprocket holes). Embedded digital audio is but one use of 2D barcodes.
|
|

See also

|
|