About Barcode

A barcode printer (or bar code printer) is a computer peripheral for printing barcode labels or tags that can be attached to physical objects. Barcode printers are commonly used to label cartons before shipment, or to label retail items with UPCs or EANs.

The most common barcode printers employ one of two different printing technologies. Direct thermal printers use a printhead to generate heat that causes a chemical reaction in specially designed paper that turns the paper black. Thermal transfer printers also use heat, but instead of reacting the paper, the heat melts a waxy or resin substance on a ribbon that runs over the label or tag material. The heat transfers ink from the ribbon to the paper. Direct thermal printers are generally less expensive, but they produce labels that can become illegible if exposed to heat, direct sunlight, or chemical vapors.

Barcode printers are designed for different markets. Industrial barcode printers are used in large warehouses and manufacturing facilities. They have large paper capacities, operate faster and have a longer service life. For retail and office environments, desktop barcode printers are most common.

Barcode Printer Manufacturers

 

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner

For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.


Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.

Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

Our Brochures Preview

To provide more easy view of brochures of various products, we have used a brochure preview in this post. will be updated as we add our brochures regularly.

 

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner

For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.


Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.

Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

Best Barcode Artwork

clip_image001 Barcode Chandelier

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The Barcode Chandelier is an oversize chandelier based on the ubiquitous bar code graphic. It's laser cut with black and transparent acrylic and looks absolutely amazing. (Link)


clip_image003 Barcode Building

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The Russian office Vitruvius & Sons designed a building called ‘Shtrikh Kod':Barcode, for the city of St. Petersburg . The rigorous application of thebarcode iconography surprisingly works quite well. It goes so far as that there are actual windows behind the numbers at the sixth floor. You could actually look out from, like, the number five. (Link)

clip_image005 Product Barcode Art

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Japanese firm D-Barcode have redesigned hundreds of barcodes for use on products in their native country. Through their creative approach to design, they have come up with barcodes resembling everything, from aprons to skyscrapers and castles. The best thing about these barcodes is that they actually work! They can be seen in groceries all over Japan. (Link)


clip_image007 Barcode Zebra

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This is one of Tim Flach's interesting animal photos inspired by barcodes.(Link)


clip_image009 Barcode Billboard

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Leagas Delaney London created this billboard for Stop The traffik, which shows humans in barcode form. The poster was illustrated by Philip Nicholson at Leagas. The creative director is Rob Burleigh, while Matt Moreland was the copywriter, and Chris Clarke the art director. (Link)


clip_image011 Barcode Watch

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The Barcode Black watch from Tokyo Flash is certainly a winner in the looks department, featuring LEDs that tell the time in a futuristic manner. The first two columns depict the current hour, where each light in column 1 equals to give hours, and each light in column 2 signifies a single hour. The third and fourth columns use each light to signify 10 minutes and 1 minute respectively. (Link)

clip_image013 Barcode Sofa

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This sofa is designed by Jason John Muscat from Demuzz Designs. It's made from plywood and each individual bar is upholstered with foam and then fixed onto a Perspex platform with LEDS incorporated into the base. Pretty cool. (Link)

clip_image015 Barcode CD holder

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Put you CDs in this barcode holder. Designed by Marián Laššák (Link)


clip_image017 Barcode Posters

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Russian design firm Art Lebedev Studio has created some incredible posters that take their barcode logo one step further. As it states on their site, “We enjoy making new posters. If you look carefully, you'll find our barcode logo on each one of them. We love it so much we can't help seeing it all around us.” They've created numerous posters that bring barcodes to mind even though the subject matter is people, nature or objects you see on a regular basis. (Link)

clip_image019 Barcode Street Art

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Barcode street art in Northampton. (Link)

clip_image021 Barcode Coat Hanger

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Barcodes are the inspiration for Lina Meier's BarDeco collection, black lines of different widths are prominent in this innovative coat hanger. (Link)


clip_image023 Barcode Clutch

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This barcode clutch from Ecoist at Reform School is made from recycling candy wrappers, soda bottles, and food containers. The clutch is available in three sizes small (coin purse), medium (phone & keys) and large (clutch purse). Plus, Ecoist will plant a tree for every bag that is sold! (Link)

Original Source : http://oddee.com/item_96851.aspx

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner

For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.


Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.

Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

RFID Helps Deaf children To Learn Sign Language

Thanks to a computer program and RFID-enabled toys, preschoolers learn faster

A group of researchers in the United States are developing a system that uses RFID to teach sign language to very young children.
While there are a whole variety of computer-based sign language learning programs, none of them are very well adapted to the special learning needs of 3 to 5 year olds. The professors and researchers in question have created a system that combines toys and a computer to make sign language more real and more understandable for preschoolers and their parents and teachers.
RFID tags are embedded into several dozens toys, each representing an airplane, dog, cat, car, house, boat and so forth. When a child brings one of the toys up to an RFID reader situated near the computer, the computer screen automatically shows a video of a person demonstrating that item's sign, as well as several other images of that item. The program also displays the printed word on the screen and speaks the word out loud, for the benefit of parents or educators who can hear. 
The importance of starting to learn any language, including sign language, as early as possible in childhood is very well known. By allowing educators to link actual objects that can be seen and held with their sign, RFID is helping make it easier for very young deaf children to build a solid foundation in learning.

RFID and Barcode are an mutual growing technologies. but we prefer barcode are more cheaper than the RFID in terms of industries. But RFID applications are huge.

Original Source : www.discoverrfid.org

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner

For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.


Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.

Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

How To Generate Barcode’s From Microsoft Word And Microsoft Excel

Do you want to easily generate barcodes in Microsoft Office Word and Excel programs? By default there is no functionality in MS Word / Excel to create barcodes. However, barcode addon for MS Word / Excel makes this an easy routine. After installing plugin, you can generate barcode from data contained in Microsoft Word or Excel documents.

Barcode addon for MS Word & Excel

1. Download Barcode addon & install it for MS Word / Excel on your computer.

2. After installation, Barcode Toolbar will be visible on Add-Ins tab.

3. Select and highlight data that should be converted into barcode.

4. After selection, click button of the desired barcode type to generate barcode.

You can also distrbute Word files with embedded barcodes without need to install font package on other system. However, a developer License to the associated font is required. This addon is free and is compatible with Microsoft Word and Excel 2003, 2007 and 2010.

Original Source : www.tothepc.com

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner

For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.


Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.

Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

A crackdown on an illegal pharmaceutical supply chain brings to light several lacunae in the drug control mechanism in Tamil Nadu.

RAGPICKERS in Chennai and its suburbs were in for a surprise when they reached the dumping yards sometime in the middle of March. Along with wastepaper, discarded polythene sachets, rubber goods and plastic articles were huge quantities of medicines in vials, tubes, bottles and strips. It soon came to be known that spurious and time-barred drugs had found their way to open grounds, dumping yards, roadsides and lake bunds in different parts of Tamil Nadu following a crackdown by the government on what turned out to be an illegal pharmaceutical supply chain.

The illegal trade brought disrepute to the State, which has been making great strides in the manufacture and distribution of drugs. There were 697 units manufacturing allopathic drugs, 14 making homoeopathic medicines, and 113 producing cosmetics, besides 42,271 retail medical outlets in the State, as on October 31, 2009.

The authorities admitted that the sale of spurious drugs had been going on for some years. Though the government has taken steps to allay the apprehension of the public over the issue, panic still prevails over the genuineness of the medicines it buys from the pharmacies. The issue rocked the State Assembly on April 7 when the opposition All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam demanded the resignation of Health Minister M.R.K. Panneerselvam “owning moral responsibility for the unchecked sale of fake and time-barred drugs across the State”. Other opposition parties – the Congress, the Pattali Makkal Katchi, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the Communist Party of India, the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi – demanded stern action against those involved in the drug scam.

The case was transferred to the Crime Branch (Criminal Investigation Department), or CB-CID, of the State on April 3. The police and the revenue and drug control directorates, which conducted joint raids in Chennai and other parts of the State, seized fake and expired drugs worth several lakhs of rupees. In one of these operations, the city police seized drugs worth Rs.1 crore from Purasawalkam in Chennai on March 24.

The investigating agencies played their cards close to the chest as several theories did the rounds about what appeared to be an inter-State drug racket. “We do not want to leave anything to chance. However, indications are that the scam has inter-State ramifications. The network spreads to areas, including Delhi, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Puducherry,” said an official source.

Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi said the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) government would not hesitate to demand a probe into the scam by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) if it had multi-State ramifications. Political observers said the fact that Karunanidhi himself replied to a call-attention motion in the House showed the importance he attached to it. The fact that the manufacture of medicines comes under the Union Ministry of Petroleum and Fertilizers held by Karunanidhi’s son M.K. Azhagiri enhanced the anxiety of the treasury benches, they pointed out.

The police arrested 28 people, 11 of whom were detained under the Goondas Act. The key suspects include Meenakshi Sundaram, of Meena Health Care Private Limited, and Sanjay Kumar and Pradeep Chordia. Meenakshi Sundaram, a stockist, had a case registered against him in 2001 for selling medicines without a licence, the police said.

Rejecting the plea of Meenakshi Sundaram and four others for anticipatory bail, a sessions court on March 25 expressed grave concern at the manner in which discarded drugs were retrieved from dumping yards and repackaged for sale after the batch number and the expiry date were tampered with. In another development, the Madras High Court on March 30 directed the authorities concerned to take stern action against fake medical practitioners and people who ran dispensaries that sold time-barred medicines.

Rackets in spurious drugs have had their victims sporadically in the past. In December last year, a three-year-old girl of Pulianthope in Chennai died after she was allegedly given time-barred drugs for fever. Her parents lodged a complaint with the police in this regard. Much ahead of this incident, the Directorate of Drug Control (DDC) had come to know of the circulation of a spurious drug to treat irregular, painful or heavy periods. The case was handed over to the CB-CID in August 2009.

The investigations in spurious drug cases took a significant turn after the personnel of the DDC found a large stock of time-barred and fake drugs in an apartment in Purasawalkam on March 11. It gave the authorities important leads to a network of operators who circulated spurious drugs, breaking the normal cycle of manufacture and distribution. Among the seized articles were drug labels, injections, syringes, antibiotics, anti-hypertension pills, anti-inflammatory drugs, ointments for burns and cut injuries, protein supplements and cough syrups.

Since then events unfolded so fast that it became difficult for one to comprehend the intricacies of the problem. Even as raids were conducted at manufacturing units, warehouses of wholesalers and retailers, and medical shops in different parts of the State, the Chief Minister convened a high-level meeting of officials, on March 22, to take stock of the situation arising out of the seizures. He asked the police and the Health Department to intensify the drive and catch the people involved in the production of fake drugs and the recycling of expired medicines.

Investigations revealed that truckloads of counterfeit and time-barred medicines were moved out from wholesale godowns to retail outlets after being made to appear genuine with the use of sophisticated technology in printing and packaging. Expired drugs from junkyards were also collected and recirculated after fresh expiry dates and batch numbers were printed on them, the investigators said.

Lacunae

V. GANESAN

Expired drugs being seized by the police in a godown in Egmore, Chennai, on March 24.

The busting of the drug racket exposed several lacunae in the drug control mechanism in the State besides bringing to the fore the nexus between manufacturers of spurious drugs and the authorities concerned, the suspected political patronage for this illegal activity, and the unethical practices employed by pharmaceutical companies to push their products.

For instance, the scam brought to light the sorry state of affairs in the State Drugs Control Administration. Until the appointment of a Director in September last year, the DDC had no regular head for nearly 10 years. The directorate was also heavily understaffed: until recently it had 50 drug inspectors for the whole State against the sanctioned strength of 75. The lone Drugs Testing Laboratory in Chennai, too, was inadequately staffed.

The “rags-to-riches” story of some of the prime suspects shows the alarming rate at which the spurious drug trade has been growing. Though confusion prevails in assessing the scale of counterfeit drugs manufactured and circulated in the country, the Central government has put it at 0.3-0.4 per cent of the pharmaceutical industry’s annual turnover of Rs.75,000 crore. Some experts, using 2001 statistics ascribed to the World Health Organisation, say 35 per cent of the world’s spurious drugs are produced in India. However, others point out that the WHO, in a letter to the Government of India in August 2003, clarified that it had not conducted any such study.

V.K. Subburaj, Principal Secretary (Health and Family Welfare) to the Tamil Nadu government, highlighted the various steps taken by the government to stem the rot. He said pharmaceutical manufacturers in the State had been asked to follow the prescribed procedure in taking back expired drugs and in their disposal. Retailers had been asked to appoint full-time pharmacists at the outlets, he said. Apart from sensitising wholesalers and retailers on the norms to be adopted in the business, the government had taken steps to create public awareness on the issue, Subburaj said. He warned that “those who violate the law and play with the lives of the people, in spite of all these administrative measures, will be dealt with an iron hand”. According to an amendment of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, which was notified on August 10, 2009, the penalty for manufacturing spurious drugs has been increased substantially, to a minimum imprisonment of 10 years that may be extended to life term and a minimum fine of Rs.10 lakh or three times the value of the confiscated drugs, whichever is higher. Subburaj said the violators of the law would be dealt with according to the provisions in the Act. The Chief Minister pointed out that some of the offenders on previous occasions were awarded only nominal punishment such as a penalty of up to Rs.7,000 and imprisonment until the rising of the court.

Subburaj put part of the blame for the collapse of the drug cycle – involving manufacture, distribution and safe disposal of time-barred medicines – on manufacturers who authorised others to carry out the task of disposing of expired drugs. Denying that lack of incinerators had contributed to the recirculation of expired drugs in the market, he said it would not be a big problem for the multi-crore manufacturing units to install incinerators.

He said the government had written to the High Court pleading for the appointment of special courts for speedy trials as around 500 drug-related cases were pending before the courts. Subburaj added that steps were also taken to fill vacancies in the DDC, which started functioning as a separate department from November 1981. “We are in the process of creating additional posts to cope with the increasing workload.”

M. Baskaran, Director, DDC, said surprise raids conducted at 3,000 retail outlets throughout the State from March 22 to 29 revealed just about five violations, and there was no need to panic. In the past three years, of the 670 sanctions for prosecution accorded, only around 20 cases were related to the sale of time-barred drugs, he pointed out.

He said that even with the limited number of personnel, the directorate was able to unearth between August 2009 and March 20 this year spurious drugs containing norethisterone and the counterfeiting of a cough syrup and a “fast moving” medicine for cardiac problems. “The manufacturers in the State have been asked to take corrective steps. If they violate relevant laws and procedures, they will not be allowed to run the units. In the last three years alone, around 90 erring units have been closed,” he said.

“Tamil Nadu’s share in drug export is Rs.3,500 crore, which accounts for 10 per cent of the medicine exported by the country, and the value of drugs produced in the State annually is Rs.6,000 crore,” he said.

R. Ramesh Sundar, general secretary of the Tamil Nadu Medical and Sales Representatives Association, said what the authorities had unearthed so far was only the tip of the iceberg. Describing the drive against the misuse of licences, recycling of expired drugs and selling of fake medicines as steps taken in the right direction, he urged the government to focus its attention also on other areas of concern in the pharmaceutical industry: unscientific and irrational combinations of medicines, over-invoicing, and flouting of rules with regard to fixing the price of drugs.

Taking advantage of the excise duty holiday declared by certain States, including Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, signboard drug manufacturing units had mushroomed, contributing in a big way to the growth of counterfeit medicines, he alleged. Ramesh Sundar also flayed certain pharmaceutical companies for the unethical marketing practices they employed to push their products.

Some experts are also dismayed at the new-found interest of some politically influential people in the money-spinning health sector. They say the spurious drug business cannot flourish without the support of these influential sections.

Dr C.S. Rex Sargunam, former Director of the Institute of Child Health and president of the Tamil Nadu Health Development Forum, said nothing substantial had been done with regard to the manufacture and sale of spurious drugs that caused serious side effects. Several manufacturers outsourced the production processes in order to cut costs and merely put their labels on the packets, he said, adding that the government should not give licences to people who did not have the necessary qualification or expertise to start manufacturing units.

Dr Rex emphasised the urgent need to shift the drug industry from the Ministry of Petroleum and Fertilizers to the Ministry of Health. This, along with measures to enhance health and hygiene in the country, would go a long way in ending the lopsided priorities in the field of public health, he said. Claiming that the drug control mechanism in the country was in bad shape, he stressed the need for effective coordination between the Central drug control agency and the DDCs.

He also called for steps to ensure that results of tests done by the Drugs Testing Laboratory were furnished within three weeks. Though the number of basic essential drugs did not exceed 300, several thousands of irrational combinations were being circulated, he said. He asked the government not to allow these drugs. He suggested that the drug control administration in the country should elicit the views of competent professionals before allowing the manufacture and sale of drugs. Dr Rex asked the government to support the professional bodies of medical personnel so as to prevent them from depending on pharmaceutical companies to run medical journals or hold conferences.

“It is a shocking revelation that a racket of this magnitude has been going on, and that too in Tamil Nadu,” said T.S. Jaishankar, chairman, Confederation of Indian Pharmaceutical Industry. “The State always had a reputation for manufacturing good-quality products and this issue will greatly affect the industry, though no manufacturer is involved.”

With a view to eradicating fake and time-barred drugs, he suggested that the product label should have the name of the medicine and the expiry date printed clearly in bold fonts. He said that consumers should buy full strips with the name of the medicine and the expiry date, and should always insist on a bill. He also called upon retail pharmacists not to change the prescribed medicine on their own and push products of their interest. Jaishankar has also proposed an amendment of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act to ensure incineration of time-barred drugs within one year of expiry.

Original Source : http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20100507270903700.htm

Trridev-Zebra Banner

Trridev-Zebra Banner
For over 4 years, Trridev Labels has provided automation solutions and barcoding equipment to a wide range of large and small companies in virtually every industry sector. Trridev Labels offers more than 10,000 brand name products and services such as barcode printers and zebra printers.

Contact Trridev Labelss Mfg Co – If you have requirement of  Barcode Labels, Barcode Printers , Barcode Scanners, self Adhesive Labels, Computer Labels, Multi-color labels, Security labels. We provide you a complete solutions for barcode.

Call us at 96000 07995 / 98840 42305 To Get the Best Price Tagged with Best Quality.



Also follow me at twitter to know what I am doing.
Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co

Ten Steps to Bar Code Implementation

Ten Steps to Bar Code Implementation

    Step 1: Get a GS1 Company Prefix
    Step 2: Assign Numbers
    Step 3: Select a Bar Code printing Method
    Step 4: Select a "Primary" Scanning Environment
    Step 5: Select a Bar Code
    Step 6: Pick a Bar Code Size
    Step 7: Format the Bar Code Text
    Step 8: Pick a Bar Code Color
    Step 9: Pick the Bar Code Placement
    Step 10: Build a Bar Code Quality Plan


    Step 1: Get a GS1 Company Prefix


Before a company can begin using bar codes, they must create the numbers that go inside the bar code. These numbers are called GS1 Identification Keys. The first step in building a GS1 Key is to obtain a GS1 Company Prefix from a GS1 Member Organisation. GS1 Company Prefixes are used by over 1 million companies worldwide as the basis for creating unique numbers to identify everything in the supply chain. To obtain a GS1 Company Prefix contact the GS1 Member Organisation in your country.

Step 2: Assign Numbers

After receiving a GS1 Company Prefix, a company is ready to begin assigning identification numbers to their trade items (products or services), themselves (as a legal entity), locations, logistic units, individual company assets, returnable assets (returnable pallets, kegs, tubs), and service relationships.

The process is fairly simple. You learn about how to format each number then use the GS1 Company Prefix in combination with reference numbers you assign. Your local GS1 Member Organisation can provide you with specific information about how many numbers you can assign based on the length of your GS1 Company Prefix.

Step 3: Select a Bar Code Printing Company

To begin, you should decide what you are bar coding and if the bar code will carry static or dynamic information inside it. An example of static information would be simply a product identification number (GTIN) on a cereal box. An example of dynamnic information would be printing serial numbers on product labels.

If your bar code has static information and you need a large volume of labels then you will likely ask a printing company to print your labels. If you need a small volume of labels or need to print labels with dynamic information you will likely need an on-demand printer like a laser printer in your office or thermal transfer printer in your warehouse.

Knowing how you will print your bar code is an important question to answer in developing a good bar code implementation plan. Again, your local GS1 Member Organisation is there to assist you in making the right selection and many Member Organisations can also help you find a printer in your local area.

Step 4: Select a "Primary" Scanning Environment

The specifications for bar code type, size, placement, and quality all depend on where the bar code will be scanned.

There are four basic scanner environment scenarios for trade items:

  1. Product package scanned at the retail point-of-sale (POS)
  2. Product package scanned in a general distribution
  3. Product package scanned at POS but also scanned in distribution
  4. special environments like medical device marking

By knowing where your bar code will be scanned you can establish the right specifications for its production. For example, if a product package is scanned at Point-of-Sale (POS) and in general distribution, you will need to use an EAN/UPC symbol to accomodate POS but print it in a larger size to accomodate distribution scanning and ensure the placement meets automated distribution scanning requirements.

You can find more information in the GS1 General Specifications (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation, for on scanner environments see Section 5.4, for symbol placement consult Section 6.0).

Step 5: Select a Bar Code

Selecting the right bar code is critical to the success of your bar code implementation plan, but here are some high level tips:

  • If you bar code a trade item that will be scanned at the retail point-of-sale (POS), you must use an EAN/UPC symbol.
  • If you are printing a bar code with variable information like serial numbers, expiry dates, or measures, then you will use GS1-128, GS1 DataBar (RSS), or in special cases Composite Component or GS1 DataMatrix symbols.
  • If you just want to print a bar code carrying GTIN on a corrugated carton, ITF-14 may be the choice for you.

There are other factors to consider so contact your local GS1 Member Organisation to see what implementation products and services they offer.

Step 6: Pick a Bar Code Size

After the correct bar code symbol is specified together with the information to encode in it, the design stage begins. The size of the symbol within the design will depend on the symbol specified, where the symbol will be used, and how the symbol will be printed.

EAN/UPC Symbols

EAN/UPC Symbols differ from ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols because they are scanned by retail omni-directional scanners. This means that EAN/UPC Symbols have a fixed relationship between symbol height and width. When one dimension is modified, the other dimension should be altered by a proportional amount.

Because of this relationship, EAN/UPC Symbols have a nominal height and width specified. A range of allowable sizes from 80% to 200% of the nominal size are also specified and a figure showing the range of dimensions can be found in GS1 General Specifications, Section 5.1, Appendix 7. This range of sizes is often referred to as ""magnification factors"" on purchase orders specifying EAN/UPC Symbol sizes. The minimum, nominal, and maximum magnification for EAN/UPC Symbols are shown in Figure 1.3.1-1.

EAN/UPC Magnification

Minimum (80%)

Minimum EAN/UPC bar code size

Nominal (100%)

Nominal EAN/UPC bar code size

Maximum (200%)

Maximum EAN/UPC bar code size

In order to decrease the amount of space EAN/UPC Symbols take up on a design, a decreased symbol height might be specified. This process, called truncation, is not permitted within EAN/UPC Symbology specifications and should be avoided. This is because of the negative impact it has on scan rates for retail omni-directional scanners. For more information on truncation, refer to the GS1 General Specifications, Section 6.3.3.4 (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

When EAN/UPC Symbols are used in logistics (shipping and distribution) as well as at the Point-of-Sale (POS), the range of magnification allowed is limited to between 150% and 200%. An example of this would be the symbol on a carton used for a large appliance (e.g. TV or microwave oven).

ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols

ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols also have a range of sizes specified. ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbol sizes are often specified by the width of the X-Dimension instead of magnification values. You can find information on the sizes for ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols based on the application where they are used or the identification number they carry in GS1 General Specifications, Section 5.4.2 (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

Consideration of the Printing Process

The final major consideration for symbol size is the capability of the selected printing process. The minimum size (magnification) and correct Bar Width Reduction (BWR) for a symbol varies by printing process and even from press to press. Printing companies should establish a minimum symbol size (magnification) and BWR to achieve acceptable and repeatable quality results.

As always, be sure to contact your local GS1 Member Organisation for additional implementation guidance.

Step 7: Format the Bar Code Text

The text beneath a bar code is important because if the bar code is damaged or of poor quality to begin with, then the text is used as a back-up. Click here for some examples of text formatting.

The best way to cover questions about the Human Readable Interpretation for GS1 System Bar Code Symbols is to answer some of the more frequently asked ones.

Does the Human Readable Interpretation need to be a certain size?

The OCR-B font was originally specified for use with EAN/UPC Symbols, but GS1 System specifications now permit any font as long as it is clearly legible. For detailed size specifications for EAN/UPC Symbols, see GS1 General Specifications Section 5.1, Appendix 6 (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

The human-readable text for ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols must be clearly legible and in a size proportional to the symbol size as per GS1 General Specifications Section 5.2.1.6 (ITF-14) and Section 5.3.7.4 (GS1-128) (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

Is the Human Readable Interpretation supposed to be above or below the symbol?

It depends on the symbol you are using. For EAN/UPC Symbols, refer to the drawings in the GS1 General Specifications Section 5.1, Appendix 6. For ITF-14 and GS1-128 Symbols the text can be printed above or below the symbol as per GS1 General Specifications Section 5.2.1.6 (ITF-14) and Section 5.3.7.4 (GS1-128) (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

Is the layout of the human readable characters under the bar code important?

Yes. For EAN/UPC Symbols the human readable characters should be as the drawings referenced in the question above. The spacing of Human Readable Interpretation characters under ITF-14 and GS1-128 helps make the text easier to read and key enter. While including spaces is perfectly appropriate for the Human Readable Interpretation, the spaces must not be encoded in GS1 symbols.

I see parentheses around the Application Identifiers (AI) in the GS1-128 Symbol. Are they supposed to be there and are they encoded in the bars and spaces of the symbol?

All AIs must be enclosed in parentheses in the Human Readable Interpretation, but the parentheses are not encoded in the symbol per the GS1 General Specifications Section 5.3.7.4. (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation).

How many digits do I print beneath the EAN/UPC Symbol in the Human Readable text?

You must, absolutely and without exception, print 12 digits, no more, no less, below the UPC-A Symbol.

You must, absolutely and without exception, print 13 digits, no more, no less, below the EAN-13 Symbol.

You must, absolutely and without exception, print eight digits, no more, no less, below UPC-E and EAN-8 Symbols.

Step 8: Pick a Bar Code Color

The optimum color combination for a bar code symbol is black bars with a white background (spaces and Quiet Zones). If you want to use other colors, the following may help you in choosing satisfactory ones:

  • GS1 Bar Code Symbols require dark colors for bars (e.g., black, dark blue, dark brown, or dark green).
  • The bars should always consist of a single line color and should never be printed by multiple imaging tools (e.g., plate, screen, cylinder).
  • GS1 Bar Code Symbols require light backgrounds for the Quiet Zones and spaces (e.g., white).
  • In addition to light backgrounds, ""reddish"" colors may also be used. If you have ever been in a darkroom with red lighting and tried to read red copy, you know it can virtually disappear. This is also true of similar colors such as orange, pink, peach, and light yellows. Given the fact that most bar code scanners use a red light source, you can quickly see why these colors may be suitable for backgrounds, but should be avoided for bars.
  • In many cases the symbol background is not printed. It is the color of the substrate that is being printed. If the symbol background is printed beneath the bars, the background should be printed as solid line colors.
  • If you use multiple layers of ink to increase the background opacity, each layer should be printed as a solid.
  • If you use a fine screen to deliver more ink to the substrate, be sure there are no voids in the print caused by the screen not adequately filling in.

Again, by staying with black bars and white spaces, you have selected the optimal combination, but other color combinations can be used. Consult an experienced printer recommended by your GS1 Member Organisationfor additional guidance.

Step 9: Pick the Bar Code Placement

When discussing symbol location we are referring to the symbol placement on the design. When assigning symbol placement the packaging process should be considered. You should consult the packaging engineer to make sure the symbol will not be obscured or damaged (e.g., over a carton edge, beneath a carton fold, beneath a package flap, or covered by another packaging layer). To determine the proper location for GS1 bar codes, see the following sections of the GS1 General Specifications (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation):

  • Logistics Label Design, Section 2.2.4.4
  • General Placement Principles, Section 6.2
  • General Placement Guidelines for the Retail Point of Sale, Section 6.3
  • Placement Guidelines for Specific Package Types, Section 6.4
  • Symbol Placement for Clothing and Fashion Accessories, Section 6.5
  • General Format Guidelines for Clothing and Fashion Accessories Labels, Section 6.6
  • General Placement Guidelines for Symbol Placement on Items used in Distribution, Section 6.7

After determining the proper placement, the printing company should be consulted before assigning the symbol rotation. This is because many printing processes require bar codes to be printed in a specific orientation to the feed direction of the web or sheet.

If possible, when using flexographic printing, the bars should run parallel to the press web direction or in the picket fence orientation. If the bars are required to run perpendicular to the press direction or in the ladder orientation, try to avoid distorting the symbol for the plate roll circumference.

When using either silk screen or rotogravure printing processes, the symbol should be aligned parallel to the cell structure on the screen or gravure plate cylinder to provide the smoothest bar edge possible.

For more information or to obtain a copy of the GS1 General Specifications, contact your local GS1 Member Organisation.

Step 10: Build a Bar Code Quality Plan

ISO/IEC 15416 Bar Code Print Quality Test Specifications for Linear Symbols describes a method for assessing the quality of bar code symbols after they are printed. An ISO-based verifier looks at the symbol in the way a scanner does, but goes further by grading the symbol's quality.

GS1 utilises the ISO/IEC method, but specifies the minimum grade necessary for every GS1 bar code based on which symbol is used, where it is used, or what identification number it is carrying. In addition to the minimum grade, GS1 also specifies the verifier aperture width and wavelength.

Setting up different minimum specifications is similar to a university using a standardized test to determine whether applicants qualify for admission. Several universities may utilize the same standardized test, but each sets the minimum score necessary for its applicants to be admitted.

GS1 General Specifications Section 5.4.2.8 (available from your local GS1 Member Organisation) provides a quick reference list of symbol quality specifications depending on the symbol type, the application, or the identification number the symbol is carrying.

GS1 members may choose to perform their own quality control of bar code production but today many GS1 Member Organisation offer bar code quality verification services.

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Posted By: KirubaKaran

Web Marketing Executive – Trridev Labels Mfg Co