Tel:
86-27-83372627
86-27-83372628
86-27-83372629
Fax:
86-27-83372625
E-mail:
info@sinicline.net
The History of Barcode Labels |
|
Release time:2013-02-28 Source:admin Reads: | |
Reg the barcode labels, people all treat this as a very useful tool. But does any one knows the history of that? Here I will tell you the history of barcod lebals. In 1948 Bernard Silver, a graduate student at Drexel Institute of Technology in Philadephia, Pennsylvania, USA overheard the president of the local food chain, Food Fair, asking one of the deans to research a system to automatically read product information during checkout. Silver told his friend Norman Joseph Woodland about the request, and they started working on a variety of systems. Their first working system used ultraviolet ink, but the ink too easily faded and was fairly expensive. Convinced that the system was workable with further development, Woodland left Drexel, moved into his father's apartment in Florida, and continued working on the system of making barcode labels. His next inspiration came from Morse code, and he formed his first barcode from sand on the beach. "I just extended the dots and dashes downwards and made narrow lines and wide lines out of them." To read them, he adapted technology from optical soundtracks in movies, using a 500-watt light bulb shining through the paper onto an RCA935 photomultiplier tube (from a movie projector) on the far side. He later decided that the system would work better if it were printed as a circle instead of a line, allowing it to be scanned in any direction. On 20 October 1949 Woodland and Silver filed a patent application for "Classifying Apparatus and Method", in which they described both the linear and bullseye printing patterns, as well as the mechanical and electronic systems needed to read the barcode labels. The patent was issued on 7 October 1952 as US Patent 2,612,994. In 1951, Woodland moved to IBM and continually tried to interest IBM in developing the system. The company eventually commissioned a report on the idea, which concluded that it was both feasible and interesting, but that processing the resulting information would require equipment that was some time off in the future. IBM offered to buy the patent of barcode labels, but its offer was not high enough. Philco purchased their patent in 1962 and then sold it to RCA sometime later |