The document provides an overview of barcodes, including their history, technology, terminology, types, uses and benefits. It discusses that the first barcode patent was issued in 1952 and how they started being used widely in grocery stores in the 1970s to automate checkout processes. Barcodes represent a unique product identity and allow for accurate, real-time data collection that saves labor costs and improves resource management. Common barcode types include UPC, Code 128 and Data Matrix, which are used across various industries like retail, shipping, warehousing and healthcare for applications like inventory tracking, electronic data interchange and patient identification.
2. AGENDA
• History of Bar Codes
• Why use barcodes?
• Bar Code Technology
• Bar Code Terminology
• Barcode types and use
• Bar Code Scanners & its types
• Uses
• Benefits of Barcoding
• Applications
3. HISTORY OF BAR CODES
• 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. The Woodland and Silver bar
code can be described as a "bull's eye" symbol, made up of a
series of concentric circles.
• A local food chain store owner had made an inquiry to the
Drexel Institute asking about research into a method of
automatically reading product information during checkout.
• In 1948, Bernard Silver , a graduate student at Drexel Institute
of Technology in Philadelphia joined together with fellow
graduate student Norman Joseph Woodland to work on a
solution.
• Woodland's first idea was to use ultraviolet light sensitive ink.
The team built a working prototype but decided that the system
was too unstable and expensive so they went back to the
drawing board.
• On October 20, 1949, Woodland and Silver filed their patent
application for the "Classifying Apparatus and
Method", describing their invention as "article
classification...through the medium of identifying patterns".
The first patent for a bar
code type product (US
Patent #2,612,994)
USPTO
4. WHY USE BARCODES?
• As far back as the 1960s, barcodes were used in
industrial work environments. Some of the early
implementations of barcodes included the ability identify
rail road cars.
• In the early 1970s, common barcodes started appearing
on grocery shelves. To automate the process of
identifying grocery items, UPC barcodes were placed on
products.
• Today, barcodes are just about everywhere and are used
for identification in almost all types of business.
5. CONTINUED….
• When barcodes are used in the business
process, procedures are automated to increase
productivity and reduce human error.
• Whenever there is a need to accurately identify or track
something, bar-coding should be used.
• Instead of manually typing a customer identification
number into a database, if the information is contained in
a barcode, a data entry operator may scan it in & this
would increase automation and reduce human error.
6. BAR CODE TECHNOLOGY
It is an automatic identification technology
Bar code is a predefined format of dark bars and white spaces
It contain a specific information
It allows real-time data to be collected accurately and rapidly
Combination of barcode technology with computer and application software
improves performance, And productivity
7. BAR CODE TERMINOLOGY
BAR
- The darker, non reflective element of a Bar Code
BI-DIRECTIONAL SYMBOL
- A Bar Code symbol format which permits reading in either direction across the
bars and spaces
CHECK DIGIT
- A calculated character included within the Bar Code for error detection
FIXED BEAM SCANNER
- A stationary Bar Code Scanner. The symbol must be moved through the light
beam to be read
8. • SPACE
o The lighter, reflective element of a Bar Code
• START CHARACTER
o A special pattern of bars and spaces used to identify the beginning of a Bar Code
symbol
• STOP CHARACTER
o A special pattern of bars and spaces used to identify the end of a Bar Code
symbol
9. BARCODE TYPES AND USE
There are two types of barcodes:
Linear barcodes and 2D barcodes.
Linear barcodes
2D barcodes
Code 128
Data Matrix
UPC
PDF417
Interleaved 2 of 5
Maxicode
10. Some established barcode industry standards
include:
Established Standard
Common Use
Symbology
AIAG
Automotive item identification
Data Matrix
UPCA, EAN13
Items for sale worldwide
UPC/EAN
MIL-STD-130L
US Department of defense
Data Matrix
SSCC-18
Shipping cartons
Code 128
11. Linear barcodes
UPC-A: - Universal product code seen on almost all retail products in the USA and Canada
EAN-13: -European Article Numbering international retail product code.
It is used world-wide where the country code is required for marking retail items . This code is
composed of 2 numbers for country code,10 numbers for data characters and one for
checksum.
Coda bar: - Older code often used in library systems, sometimes in blood banks
Code 128: Very capable code, excellent density, high reliability; in very wide use world-wide
Code 39: General-purpose code in very wide use world-wide
12. 2-DIMENSIONAL BARCODES
• PDF417:
Excellent for encoding large amounts of data
• DataMatrix:
Can hold large amounts of data, especially suited
for making very small codes
• Maxicode:
Fixed length, used by United Parcel Service for
automated package sorting
13. ALGORITHM TO CALCULATE THE CHECK
DIGIT
• Calculated with the first 12 digits
• They are given from left to right the weights 1 and 3, alternatively.
• Then we sum them all, we take the rest of the division by 10, and the check
digit is the complement to 10 to this rest.
• Example for the code 7 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1
• 7x1 + 6x3 + 1x1 + 2x3 + 3x1 + 4x3 + 5x1 + 6x3 + 7x1 + 8x3 + 9x1 + 1x3
=113
113/10=10*11+3
3+7=10 The check digit is 7
14. BAR CODE SCANNERS
• A device used to extract information optically from a Bar Code
• Bar Code symbol consists of series of vertical dark bars separated by
spaces
• When illuminated reflected light is detected by electro optical sensor
• The intensity of reflected light from the dark bars is less than that of spaces
17. TYPES OF SCANNERS
• There are three basic types of bar code scanning devices:
• Contacts Wands (Readers)
• Active Non-Contact Readers
• Passive Non-contacts Readers
18. CONTACT READERS
Must touch or come in close proximity of
symbol
Good where the label cannot be placed in
an easy-to-view position
Normally hand-held/stationary units
Common type is pen/wand reader
Positioned angle of wand to the surface
and movement speed across the symbol
are key parameters
19. NON-CONTACT READERS
• Reader need not come in contact
with symbol
• Scan distance may be from 6” to
several feet depending upon symbol
size and scanner design
• Hand-held, fixed beam readers
20. NON-CONTACT READERS
Active Non-Contact
Readers
Passive Non-contacts
Readers
• Use of helium-neon gas lasers as a
light source
• Use a light source and a single
photo detector
• Light is coherent (single frequency)
• Operates like a video camera
• Can detect the orientation of the
symbol (using figure-eight or
stbtarus)
• The image of the bar code is
focused on to an array of photo
detectors, usually a charge
coupled device (CCD)
22. USES OF BAR CODES
Bar codes can be used in every business around the world
to track assets in any building including every desk, computer, telephone, copier
and desk accessory.
to track mail from the time it arrives in the mail room to the time it is delivered to
each desk or location within an office.
to help security guards identify every employee, every door they enter and every
room they work in.
to secure, lock or unlock entrances or exits throughout the plant.
to manage and track your vehicle fleet and each driver
23. BENEFITS OF BAR CODING
REPRESENT UNIQUE IDENTITY OF A PRODUCT
ACCURACY OF DATA INPUT (ERROR FREE)
AID EFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT OF RESOURCES AND INVENTORIES
LABOUR SAVINGS BY AVOIDING MANUAL SYSTEM
COST EFFICIENT
REAL TIME DATA COLLECTION
RAPID ACCESS TO TOTAL PRODUCTION COSTS
24. • SHIPPING
• ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE (EDI)
APPLICATIONS
• Direct communication between computers of two companies (Manufacturer & Vendor)
• Industry-wide EDI standards
• Reduces cost and saves time of business transaction
• RETAIL APPLICATIONS
•
•
•
•
Super markets
Counter-mounted Bar Code scanners
Universal Product Code (UPC)
Price and description information
• WARE HOUSING
• HEALTH CARE APPLICATIONS
• Drugs, devices, instruments
• Identification of expiry date
• Blood banking
• Blood group
• Expiry date
• Donor traceability
25.
26. CONCLUSION
• Barcodes are very useful and used all over the world
• With the common use of mobile phone, 2D barcodes will become the most
spread ones
• Not only will they be used to identify products but also to communicate
(SMS, MMS ,address contact also to communicate
(SMS, MMS, address, contact cards)
Hinweis der Redaktion
For example, in a data entry work environment, workers may be required to enter an enormous amount of data into a customer database system.