It looks like the rings (like this) you can buy to put around the necks of bottles (usually wine) to prevent drips running down the bottle. That looks awful big for one of those, though.
You do know the 2d barcode has more information on it then the front of your license? I would say a scan of the 2d barcode IS a full scan.
But since it was issued by the state of Iowa and I am submitting it to a government authority I don't really care.
Here is an open source implementation you can use to view what is on the back of your ID: http://zbar.sourceforge.net/
When I'm browsing Reddit on my Desktop, I usually use QR codes to transfer stuff from my computer to my telephone. I have an iPhone with an app called "Scan" (no advertisements, yay) and that's my favorite QR-Code scanning app so far.
Once you have it open on your phone (in Safari) you can press and hold, and it should give you an option to save it to your Camera Roll.
Here's a convenient QR code link to the wallpaper:
█▀▀▀▀▀█ ▀▀▀█▄▄▀ ▄ █▀▀▀▀▀█ █ ███ █ ▀▄█▄██▄▄ █ ███ █ █ ▀▀▀ █ ▄▀█▀██ ▀ █ ▀▀▀ █ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ █▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ █▀ ██ ▀ ▀▄▄▀███▀ ▀▄▄▄▄▄▀ ▀▀█▀█▄▀▄█▀ ██ ▄█ ▀▄▄▄█▄▄█ ▄█ ▄█▀▄█▀██ █▄▄▀ ▀█▄ ▄▀ █▀█▀ ▀▀▄▄▄▄█▀▀███▄ ▀█▀█ ▀ ▀▀▀ ▄ ▀ ▀████▀▀▀█ ▀█ █▀▀▀▀▀█ ▀█▀██▄█ ▀ █▀ █ █ ███ █ █▀ ██▀▀████▀▀█ █▄ █ ▀▀▀ █ ▄▀▀▀▀ █▄ ▀▄██ ███ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ▀ ▀ ▀ ▀ ▀ ▀
We have to manage data shipped to us from clients that comes in all kinds of media that we have to keep track of and store.
We buy barcode labels from here: http://www.mavericklabel.com/barcode-labels.html
Then we have an app based on Zbar (http://zbar.sourceforge.net/) That takes in the drive info (client name, date shipped, date recieved, date data staged), we can the barcode sticker we put on the drive and it stores it in a SQL database.
Total cost was a scanner, and what we pay for the barcodes, which we buy in bulk so they're cheap.
EDIT: For storage of drives we use foam boxes that we got from our SAN vendors when they ship us drives we purchase for storing the data we stage from teh drives., so they're basically $0, and we're reusing them for the environment!
EDIT2: Sorry I'm dribbling info in, our media guys keep updating me with more info. The app also has barcodes attached to the storage boxes, so when a drive come in, it's labeled, scanned, placed in a box, then the BOX is also scanned as part of the record. That way they can search for what box a particular drive is in/etc. All the fields are also searchable.
Sure I'm thinking of using http://zbar.sourceforge.net/ for barcode scanning. Do you want to split this up - one of us can figure out the barcode scan and the other getting it to send to their server?
PM me.
Specifically the M-402 Zebra. I had mine for almost two years until it was stolen by a homeless man. Rest in peace, Zebra. Rest in peace.
My tuba is named Thor. No seriously I own a huge tuba with "THOR" carved into the bell. Found it on teh interbutts.
You're talking about regular, 'boring' products. But any retailer would tell you that researching your market potential is important. How do you know that the products you have in mind are actually going to sell?
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Hi, I have recent encounter with Zxing library and I can save you some time by telling you that you should not use it. Instead I suggest you use http://zbar.sourceforge.net/, which is way faster and easier to make custom implementations. The landscape/portrait issue is also solved (Zxing comes only with landscape orientation; orientation switches and changes can be found on stack, which might not work in your case).
lol. He's pretty cool. When you press him down his mouth opens. I googled a bunch and this is where I think he came from.
Not sure though
Our current mobile app actually gives pricing comparison data (similar to ShopSavvy) http://scan.me/apps/ - we want to put this into the Windows 8 app as well. Our biggest fear with having barcode support in the app is that most webcams are really crappy quality. The worst thing is having to hold up your barcode to the camera and never have it detect. We're going to see if we can do anything to make it easier for lower quality cameras to detect those tiny barcodes.
I'm pretty sure you can have it both ways; retain your brand and identity, but also understand what the Android OS feels like, and is moving towards, from all the work Google has done of late.
e.g. this blog post someone posted a few days ago on Reddit
Why are you looking at it as an either/or situation? Multi-channel retail is what most serious sellers are looking at these days. Given consumer hesitance to buy jewelry online, it is good to keep your fine jewelry store running. It adds good credibility to your store too.
I found this article online while trying to help you with your query, you should check it out https://www.primaseller.com/blog/sell-online-jewelry-accessories/
All the best!
Use zbar, at http://zbar.sourceforge.net
From the readme:
>ZBar Bar Code Reader is an open source software suite for reading bar codes from various sources, such as video streams, image files and raw intensity sensors. It supports EAN-13/UPC-A, UPC-E, EAN-8, Code 128, Code 39, Interleaved 2 of 5 and QR Code. Included with the library are basic applications for decoding captured bar code images and using a video device (eg, webcam) as a bar code scanner. For application developers, language bindings are included for C, C++, Python and Perl as well as GUI widgets for Qt, GTK and PyGTK.
GS1-128 is Code 128. I'm not familiar with HIN.
It is graffer tape. (I feel like it should be gaffer but that s what the link says)
this.. THIS is worse... http://www.shopping.com/buffalo-games-leprechauns-luck-world-most-difficult-jigsaw-puzzle-expert-edition/info
was hell my family never managed to get it put together...
from website description:
> What makes this puzzle so difficult? Most jigsaw puzzles have a picture on one side only, this puzzle has a picture on both sides, rotated ninety degrees from each other, and it's the same picture! Also, all other regular jigsaw puzzles have vertical interlocking lines all cut from the same size so that it's immediately obvious which one is the top. This puzzle has vertical interlocking lines cut from one side and equally spaced horizontal interlocking lines cut from the other side. It's impossible ti distinguish one side from the other. Each piece must be compared on both sides for size, shape and color.
I can see on the tail that it's a C124 Globe Master if that helps anyone find it. I found silver ones on Amazon, but not ones with this coloring.
Does Dosbox on the N7 support zooming and panning? That might make the power-lines easier.
Personally I just keep wishing for some one-handed thumbstick gamepad for things like this. Basically something like this:
I bought one of these cases a while back and it has worked great for me.
In that same purchase I also ordered one of these: http://www.shopping.com/dreamgear-nintendo-3ds-comfort-grip-transparent-black/info (I think it was on sale when I did). Adds a little protection, but more importantly, it makes the 3DS more comfortable to hold, which is extremely useful for playing Kind Icarus: Uprising
After comparing the 2 here, I guess the 530V is better because of the voice activation feature. But as I haven't used either of them, I'm not sure from experience.
http://www.shopping.com/nintendo-made-in-the/p4b7EEz3VyucmTQGpupGMw==/info
Sorry to take away the thrill of the hunt but there. UNLESS you are now going to hunt for a better deal, in which case, you're welcome for the challenge.
I'm about an hour south of Houston. I thought I'd searched the state for the eyebrows pretty well, but it's possible I overlooked a few places. You know how eyebrows are masters of disguise.
Try a local QR reader instead of a webapp. As crowley said, brightness can be an issue. Try adjusting brightness on the device or the camera itself.
A couple local readers found from a quick search.
I Recently looked into several different solutions for a similar project. Barcode to PC: Wi-Fi scanner app and Remote Data Collection & Barcode Scanning - Scan-IT to Office (tec-it.com) are free/inexpensive solutions and IMO not difficult to set up. . I ended up using MS PowerApps a built a custom solution mostly due to the scanner we had. Oddly enough the more basic your scanner, the easier the solution, but you give up scale and some security.
I'm not quite sure what you're asking. I don't use the app myself. I'm guessing when you search a QR code, it uses your phone's default search engine.
You might try creating an issue here about your question: https://github.com/Fr4gorSoftware/SecScanQR/issues
The dev seems pretty responsive.
Hello, congratulations on being promoted! I guess you're settling into your new job by now. Here's an article that might be able to help you. It covers a broad list of terms, things to keep in mind and calculations. At some point, you'd want to automate the process as much as possible. Here's the link: https://www.primaseller.com/knowledge-base/what-is-inventory-management-definition/
Hope this helps!
Hey, I don't know if you're still looking but Primaseller might be the right one for you. Since you're looking to sell B2B and retail, you basically need two different channels which Primaseller can provide. Plus it integrates with payment processors that don't cost a bomb. Do take a look here https://www.primaseller.com
It has applications in the retail context too, although automation there refers more to tracking sales across channels, monitoring order fulfillment and ease in accounting and reports. Such inventory systems, thankfully, already exist.
Oh Primaseller is perfect for you! They are a multi-channel inventory management software where all your data is managed centrally on the cloud using their app. They have offline POS store capabilities as well as Web stores (Woocommerce/Wordpress) as well as Marketplaces (Ebay, Amazon).
You can check out their website here https://www.primaseller.com/best-pos-software
You can check out Primaseller for order management, inventory management and purchase order management. They have a B2B panel too for managing orders from your suppliers. They are priced quite reasonably, you can check it out here https://www.primaseller.com/pricing?ov=u
Oh it's a very viable idea!
Before you jump at the lucrative offer of making money with something you know how to do, you need to decide if Etsy really is for you. Thankfully, as a platform, it is very straightforward to set up and use. All you need is a PayPal account to accept payments, good pictures and a small fee you pay upfront.
Consider these three things before making the plunge: Time commitment Logistics Technical skills (Inventory management, marketing, sales)
This blog post is quite informative, have a look https://www.primaseller.com/blog/primasellers-guide-to-selling-on-etsy-successfully/
Try Primaseller to sync both. They have recently come out with a newer and more powerful integration with quickbooks. They are primarily an inventory management software that takes care of woocommerce sites and provide integration to qbo on the side. Check them out if this seems right. https://www.primaseller.com
Two possible solutions:
QR codes are cool because easy to read by a computer from paper. For the NYANOTES, you could use zbar http://zbar.sourceforge.net/ or another software to decode them, just feed the software with the NYANOTE, you'll get the private key.
You can also download an offline barcode generator app, e.g. Zint which works on both Windows and Linux desktop.
If you have an air-gapped machine, you might want to use an offline QR code scanner too, e.g. ZBar which is also featured in Electrum and Electron Cash wallets.
I think someone even developed a Monero wallet that syncs with an online computer using QR codes. Something similar to ancient IrDA standard or Timex watch, but with video cameras and monitors. Can't remember the project name.
I was working on a project where I wanted to do exactly this. What I ended up using was ZBar. They have downloads for both Windows/Linux available. For testing purposes I would grab the original picture and save it, then use PHP to save a copy as grayscale and adjust the contrast and brightness to make it easier for ZBar to read it. There was some trial and error there. After that I would run the command line of it via PHP script and it returned the barcode contents and what type of barcode it was:
exec('C:\"Program Files (x86)"\ZBar\bin\zbarimg -v ' . $pathToImage, $result);
If you want my messy testing JS+PHP (it lets you upload a picture or take one from a camera) feel free to PM me.
If you're doing it to learn computer vision techniques, the recommended tutorial from hwillis is great.
If you just need it done, rather than doing it as a learning exercise, I'd recommend ZBar (http://zbar.sourceforge.net). I used it previously and it does a pretty awesome job of qr detection, provided the code takes up enough of the image. It's rotation (and largely, scale) invariant, handles detection and decoding and is free and open source.
If the qr code is relatively small, it might be worth doing some image processing in advance to make its life easier. I used the gradients of the image to detect qr-type regions to subsequently test with ZBar: the nature of qr codes means they show pretty well as high frequency gradient regions.
Since you're tracking, you could maybe make informed choices of where to look with ZBar based on the motion of the camera/object, either with optical flow directly or using a kalman filtering type approach based on previous directions.
Speaking of tracking; my guess is you'd probably need to implement some logic on top to record where you've seen a given code based on your detections from ZBar. Might also need to do some interpolation as it's likely you'll get some misses due to motion blur, etc.
That would be awesome! I've never done apps before, and the connection to a database - from a device that may not have a stable connection - seems like a challenge as well. I've only done some googling around to figure out how I'd have to do this. I think I can use Zbar's opensource code for the scanner. I'll need to either use my mothers mac laptop, or install osx on a virtual box to get access to the app development software. The actual database isn't really a problem, I just need a list of 1000 entries, with participant names, startnumber and their starting status (Not started, started, dropped out, finished).
The problems, in order, are getting access to iphone app development software, getting Zbar to work, figuring out the database connection (after scanning a number, it should display the participants name and update their status), and building the apps graphical interface.
> what do you do do once you have your paper wallets printed? (i don't have an android smartphone to scan the QR)
When I'm not using my phone, I use a computer with a webcam and Zbarcam to easily decode the QR. :3
I would suggest using tesseract. It's a OCR engine, and its pretty handy. Here's a link to an android project using it. If your feeling really wily then you can try opencv and design your own text detection using ORB or SURF or something. But that is overkill, and I would go with tesseract.
Oh I forgot to mention zbar. If the id's have a barcode or qrcode on the backs of the or something, you could easily use those to ID them aswell.
Thanks! I have heard of ZBar but never used it.
The documentation says it only supports iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4, which makes me think it's not in active development. Does it work well with iOS 7?
I'm not sure what your goal is, and redlaser apparently changed their API (it used to be an interesting thing where you'd put a 'web app' on your homepage which just sent a URI specification to redlaser, the app, which could then launch the URI + barcode however you pleased) to be one that's pay.
Anywho, check these out:
https://code.google.com/p/zxing/
http://zbar.sourceforge.net/iphone/index.html
/r/simpleios (in the sidebar here...)
I would really love to buy one of these for my home for my desk. Could you please, with a cherry on top, tell me where you got them? I'm kind of a nut for classic car memorabilia, and I've only been able to find die cast versions, and not the stainless steel versions you guys have.
EDIT: Is this the one? http://www.shopping.com/Gas-Pump-Drink-Dispenser/info~linkin_id-8082906
Two main characters=Unimportant?
Obscene plushies, you say? Or if you meant the other kind of obscene, we have at least 2 subreddits for that kind of stuff.
Approximately when the power supply was purchased would greatly help.
That back actually seems quite unique.
-edit-
Looks more like a thermaltake than an ocz as ocz generally have the power button next to the cable, not below/above.
http://www.shopping.com/Thermaltake-Thermaltake-850-Watt-TR2-RX-Power-Supply-Black/info
Same as r_hardware_browser posted. Perfect match on the red/yellow pattern. Might not be perfect model match, but I'm near certain it's a thermaltake.
It would be relatively easy to make specific blades for a dicer which most restaurants have to cut these specifically relatively fast to order.
We went through a similar thing when my son was 4 and 5.
I got him one of these tents. He loved it. He got to go "camping" every night and I got a good night's sleep. Bonus: it gives you both a modicum of privacy and packs up easily each morning.
I want steel toe without the weight and athletic shoes with a little more protection. My favorite so far is the very affordable Carlie Boot made by Catepillar. I wear them almost 7 days a week, most comfortable steel toe boots I've found.
A comfy pet bed for him to sleep in at night.
We keep our cat in at night for his own safety, and that of the local wildlife.
If you crunch the numbers you'll find that feeding him good quality dried food (like Hills ScienceDiet) is as economical as the cheap stuff. Feeding him raw chicken necks a few times a week will help keep his teeth clean, and add extra minerals to his diet.
Cat carrier for vet visits.
Our cat loves chasing these foam discs around when we shoot them over his head.
check out the SKB molded cases....they have different sizes, I got the largest one that I could still carry on....I bought two, since they allow two. the foam is interchangable so There good for almost anything.
something similar to this
2mbps bandwidth, yup I remember them.
Had to daisychain the PCs together with a terminator end, much like you would SCSI.
Here's how we used to play DooM http://www.shopping.com/Belkin-10FT-LAPLINK-INTERLINK-SERIALDB9F-DB25F-TO-DB9F-DB25F/info
To be honest it looks like a vintage fender mounted light off of a piece of ag equipment. I believe they call them headlight buckets.
http://www.shopping.com/tractor-headlight/products
Ya might try looking here also.
http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=motorcycle+headlight+bucket
I was referring to these that are not terribly good but better than using a macro lens .. I bought this one many years ago and it was expensive back then, too, but there are levels above this as well .. "fucking expensive"-country starts after four or five hundred dollars, I would say.
I've always had great luck with net traps off of docks and piers. Just tie a chicken leg to the bottom and pull up every 15 minutes or so.
IS that the processor the model number for the computer? Either way, I'm assuming this is your computer http://www.shopping.com/Gateway-Gateway-P-7809u-Immersive-On-the-Go-17-Notebook-PC/info ?
Should be fine to run BC2 at a mix of settings, so some high - some low, at at least 30 FPS.