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BAR CODE

The bar code is a technology that has transformed the way of doing business. From its creation, it has eased all the tedious activities of administration such as inventory control, tally of sold articles and has improved the agility in customer service. Having reliable information, gathered at the point of capture, managers can take better and timely decisions about their businesses. for example, what products must be bought, which ones are obsolete, and which need to be auctioned.

A bar code has become an everyday indispensable tool. Some can remember when going groceries-shopping to a supermarket, you could have spent close to an hour just to pay for the items; today there are hardly three people in line. Thanks to bar-code technology it is possible to track a package along its path - form the collection point, going through different transport stages, and final delivery. Possibly you have noticed that many companies keep their time and attendance records through ID cards with bar codes. It is so useful that is "invisible" in our daily activities. It is hard to think how we would live without it.

The greatest benefits of this technology are the ease of use, the data-capture speed, the reliability of the data, the use of established standards and its low cost. It is impossible to mention all the benefits on this technology in such a short space, there fore we just present a brief summary.

HISTORICAL DATA

1932 - Wallace Flint. makes the first proposal to automate a retail establishment.
1949
- Joe Woodland Berny Silver. Propose the first Patent for bar codes (US patent 2,612,994). "Bull's eye code"
1959 - Girard Feissel - Proposes a numeric code made of bars.
1960 - First use in railroad cars.
1967 - Kroger Store make a pilot test in Cincinnati, OH. RCA develops the scanner.
1970 - US Committee on Retail Industry establish a panel to select a bar code standard.
1971 - Use of Plessey code in European Libraries.
1973 - UPC code is approved for products sold in retail. Based form an IBM proposal.
1974 - David C. Allis de Intermec develops code 39 alphanumeric.
1978 - Red cross approves the use of bar codes for blood banks.
1979 - EAN symbol is adopted.
1982 - US Defense department publishes LOGMARS 1189
1984 - AIAG publishes their standards for Automotive industry.
1988 - HIBCC publishes their standard for Health industry.
1988 - VICS Voluntary Industry standard is published.
1999 - ANSI standard for generic shipping labels with EDI applications. Uses Code UCC/EAN 128.

BAR CODE DESCRIPTION

  • A Bar code is an array of black bars in a white background in different widths, seen from the readers perspective.
  • The combination of bars and spaces describe a pattern that represent information.
  • It is graphical representation of information (numbers or text) that computers can read.
  • They are easily read by bar code scanners (laser, CCD, Omnidirectional, wands).
  • They are bidirectional. It does not matter the direction in which the code is read, the same information will be read.
  • The amount of data is a function of the code used.
  • UPCA - 12 numeric characters.
  • EAN13 - 13 numeric characters.
  • EAN8 - 8 numeric characters.
  • Code39 - variable length alphanumeric.
  • Typically narrow bars are 10 mils and wide bars are 30 mils.; both being black and white. High density bar codes have bars of narrower widths and Low density codes have wider bars.
  • They have delimiters characteristic of every code type.
  • It is necessary to have a quiet zone between the code and the package elements. This area lets the scanners know where the code begins and ends.
  • Check digits - Some bar codes have internal validation information, that verifies if the information read is consistent. A bar code will not be transmitted if after reading a bar code and performing an internal algorithm the verifying digit does not match the one read.
  • The type of bar code used many time will be determined by the application in which it will be used. If it is retail it will be UPC/EAN / If it is industry it will be C39/C128.

BENEFITS

Because of the following benefits, we believe the use of bar codes will be a viable technology for many years to come.

  • Low Cost - It is printed at the same time as the packaging material, therefore the cost is almost null.
  • Speed - A 14-digit bar code can be read in less than a second, while typing the information manually could take 5 seconds.
  • Reliability - Manual data capture has on average one error every 300 characters typed, a bar code can reduce this number to one error for every million characters.
  • Ease of Use - Training for new employees in bar code technology is trivial - aim and shoot.
  • Use of commercial and industrial standards. Well documented and accepted.
  • Economical equipment - Today bar code scanners and printers are the most cost effective in the market, comparing them to other alternatives like OCR (optical character recognition), Magnetic stripe, Radio frequency (RFID tags) and voice recognition.

BAR CODE SYMBOLOGY

There are many symbologies to choose from in the same way there are languages. These codes have been designed to meet the requirements of come application. Many of them have become useless because industry or commercial has favored another in their use.

Among the most important we can find the following:

 UPC/EAN - (Universal Product Code/ European Article Number)

  • Numeric code with 8,12 o 13 characters.
  • Standard used in general merchandise in Retail.
  • Has 2 numeric sections and 3 delimiters.
  • Uses three encoding schemes (A,B,C)
  • Using 7 modules, each digit is formed with 2 black bars and 2 white bars of different widths (1 to 4).
  • Structure: Contains information about the country, manufacturer and product and one verifying digit. For example
  • 7501234512343
    750 - Country (Mexico) assigned by EAN international.
    12345 - Manufacturer number assigned by AMECE.
    1234 - Product number assigned by manufacturer.
    3 - Verifying digit calculated by an algorithm.
    (Note: Because this scheme changes form country and application, please contact your local supplier of bar codes to obtain the correct structure).

INTERLEAVED 2 OF 5 (ITF).

  • Numeric code with variable length.
  • Used in Dispatch units (DUN14) or internal company information.
  • Has 2 delimiters, one at the beginning and at end of the code.
  • The number of digits must be even, codified data is arranged in pairs. Inside the pair, the first digit is coded in black bars and the second digit in white bars, interleaved one inside the other.
  • Each digit is coded with 5 bars, two of them being wide (3:1)
  • In general this code does not contain verifying digit.
  • Structure: Only in DUN14 (Dispatch unit number) the structure is well defined having the same as UPC/EAN with one or two digits in front that identifies the unit size and one verifying digit.
  • To avoid misreads it needs two wide bars at the top and bottom of the code.

CODE 39 (C39).

  • Alphanumeric code with variable length.
  • Standard used by industry to identify materials, serial numbers and complementary information.
  • Has two delimiters at the beginning and end of code with the symbol "*" (asterisk).
  • Each digit is made out of 9 bars (5 black and 4 white), 3 of them being wide (in general 2 of them black and one white).
  • Without verifying digit.
  • Can only code 44 character (0-9, A-Z,-,Space,*,$,/,+,%)

CODE 128

  • Alphanumeric code with variable information.
  • Introduced in 1981 and gaining popularity since 1990.
  • From its high density, verifying digit, and general encoding it is becoming an important standard.
  • Standard used in industry for the identification of materials, serial numbers, and complementary information.
  • With three coding schemes A,B and C (numeric with double density). Each scheme can codify 106 characters. this means that each graphical representation may have different meaning depending on the scheme used.
  • Has two delimiters, at the beginning and at the end. It is possible to change the coding scheme inside the code.
  • Each digit is made of 11 modules with 3 black bars and 3 white bars of different widths.
  • Contains a verifying digit.
  • Can represent the 128 ASCII characters.
  • Used in the UCC/EAN128 standard.

PDF417 - Bi-dimensional code.

  • Introduced in 1990 by Symbol Technologies.
  • Does not use separating bars which provides great efficiency
  • Contains error correcting characters.
  • The code may hold 1000 characters.

Data Matrix - Bi-dimensional code.

  • Introduced by Symbol Technologies.
  • Symbology similar to a chessboard.
  • Contains two white sides and two dark sides.

OTHER SYMBOLOGY - low use.

There are other symbologies that their use has been limited, among them we can find:
  • Code 93 - 1982 - high density variant of C39.
  • Codabar - 1972 - libraries, blood banks, air delivery.
  • Code 11 - 1977 - Telecom equipment.
  • Plessey - 1971 -
  • Matrix 2 of 5 - variation of Code 11 - Nieaf company.
  • Nixdorf Code - 1970 - Nixdorf Computer company.
  • Delta Distance A - 1971 - IBM
  • AMES Code - 1974 - Medical records - AMES company.
  • Meter Code - 1992 - Number wheel meters - Sprague Ackley of Intermec.
  • Bone Code - 1992 - Fish breeders.
  • POSTNET - Very well used by the US postal service.
  • StateCode - variant of POSTNET to be alphanumeric.

Bi-dimensional codes - low use.

  • Code 49 - 1987 - Identification of small parts - Intermec.
  • Codablock - Identcode Systeme.
  • Code 16K - similar to Code 49.
  • USD-5 - "Sludge code"
  • Vericode -
  • Maxicode - Hexagonal code used widely by UPS.
  • ArrayTag -
  • DotCode -
  • LEBcode -
  • QR Code - 1994 - Japan.

THEORY OF OPERATION

The first step in making a bar code system is to have printed symbols. Today most manufacturers already include bar codes in their products. Therefore the implementation is easy. Nevertheless if you are a manufacturer and require to print some bar codes, you will need a thermal transfer label printer.

To read a symbol, bar code scanners are required. There are three main technologies available - Laser scanners, CCD Scanners, Omnidirectional scanners or hands free. Wand scanners are obsolete (we do not recommend their use).

In addition we require a device that will make a record of the codes read. There are computers and portable data terminals. A software is required with an application you find suitable / i.e. inventory control, point of sale, work in progress, access control, fixed asset control, among others.

Once the equipment is connected together and the personnel trained, just aim at the code and when a "Beep" is heard the data will be read in your computer; that simple. What you do with that information is another story that does not have to do with bar codes.

Your computer will perform the activities needed for the required end. If you use a point of sale software, then the software will register the sale, will look up the price in its data base, will deduct the product form inventory and will print the sales receipt. It will send a signal to the printer to open the cash drawer and will register the method of payment, being cash or credit card or customer credit account.

ADVANTAGES

From it ease of use, the advantages we can mention are:

  • Information goes directly form the scanner to the computer.
  • Human intervention is minimal.
  • Errors are reduced to one in a million characters read.
  • Information is in real time, just when events are taking place.

APPLICATIONS

All the advantages and benefits mentioned have promoted the wide diffusion of bar code technology. today it is possible to find it in many applications as follows:

  • Access control.
  • Asset management.
  • Warehouse management.
  • Point of Sale
  • Work in Progress.
  • Libraries
  • MRP and MRP II.
  • Warehouse receiving.
  • Material Shipping.
  • In-route sales.
  • Electronic Data interchange (EDI).
  • Hospitals and Health.
  • Package and Messenger tracking.
  • Luggage tracking (airlines).
  • Postal service and Messenger services.
  • Supermarkets.
  • Just in time (JIT).

 

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