Barcode file transfer

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Revision as of 15:31, 1 September 2007 by Ricardo (talk | contribs) (Added categories Network and Internet, plus IPR issues.)
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This page is about 2-Dimensional, square or rectangular barcodes, and how they can be (and already are) used to transfer a few Kilobytes of information from place to place, or to publish that information in books and magazines. The method could be used by the One Laptop Per Child schools to send an email message, some information or a small program in a 2-D Barcode, printed on a paper-letter, newsletter or circulars, etc. The recipient reads the messages into their computer via a scanner or digital camera and 2D barcode decoding software.


Introduction

People are already familiar with 1-Dimensional barcodes, as used on products in supermarkets and stores. These store a few dozen bytes of information as a row of thick and thin stripes, with error-check information.

Some people may not have heard of 2-Dimensional barcodes, which can store far more data (over 2000 bytes) in a square or rectangular pattern of black and white square dots.

This page is about 2-Dimensional, square or rectangular barcodes, and how they can be, and already, are used to transfer a few Kilobytes of information from place to place or publish that information. The method could be used by the One Laptop Per Child schools to send an email message, some information or a small program in a 2-D Barcode, printed on a paper-letter, newsletter or circulars, etc. The recipient reads the messages into their computer via a scanner or digital camera and 2D barcode decoding software.

What do they look like?

They look like a a block of random black and white dots, either a square or rectangular block dependent on the Barcode Standard. Please see Wikipedia: PDF417 (a 2D Barcode Standard with rectangular barcodes), Wikipedia: Data Matrix (another 2D Barcode Standard with square barcodes).

How big are they?

About 1 inch x 1 inch, or 2.5cm x 2.5cm.

How are they created?

They can be created in several ways :-

  1. Enter your message into a form on a 2d Barcode website, click a button and create an image, which you can cut and paste into letters, magazines, etc.
  2. Use 2D Barcode software to read any kind of file and produce an equivalent barcode picture file. The information can also come from text you type into a form.
  3. Install a 2D Barcode font or a printer driver, so that any program, such as your word processor can print your text file as if it were being sent to a normal printer, but it creates a barcode image instead. You then copy the image file into letters or other documents and print them out.

How does the message get to it's recipient

  1. By mail (to the intended recipient or to be read and passed on by email)
  2. By hand delivery of letters between schools (a paper 'Sneakernet'}
  3. By publishing a magazine, newsletter, book, etc.

How does the recipient read the information?

  1. Using a scanner (which people often have as part of a printer-scanner combo)
  2. Using a camera-phone
  3. Using a digital camera

2D-barcode software is needed to decode them and write the information to a file or display it.

  1. How much information can be transferred?==

Just over 2000 bytes per 2D-Barcode, but you can print several on a page.

Existing Uses

  1. Printed in magazines to give details of pop-bands, website-addresses, special offers, software, ring-tones, etc.
  2. Printed on stickers and stuck on notice-boards, lampposts, bus shelters, etc, then people can take a picture with their camera phone. Software previously downloaded into the camera phone can decode it and display the message on the camera's screen. The software comes from a mobile phone service or via the internet and a PC USB cable, bluetooth or infra-red link.

Potential uses

  1. For schools with no internet-access, they could add a barcode to the end of a printed letter, to send any information which needs to be in machine-readable form. For example, where they want the recipient of the letter to email a message to a whole group of people or upload a small web-page to a website.
  2. I leave it to you to think of other uses.

Intellectual property rights and open-source

There are several standards for 2D-barcodes. Some are clearly the commercial property of one company or organization and covered by patents and licenses. I don't know whether there are any open-source standards and software.

Who can use it?

The sender must have a printer and the recipient must have a camera or scanner and software. This limits which OLPC schools can use it. Not everyone will have this equipment, but some might. I'm just putting 2D-barcodes here so you can think about whether they would be useful or not.

--Ricardo 11:31, 1 September 2007 (EDT)