Datastrip Code

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** [https://github.com/MR2011/Cauzin-Softstrip-Decoder Cauzin Softstrip decoder software]
 
** [https://github.com/MR2011/Cauzin-Softstrip-Decoder Cauzin Softstrip decoder software]
 
* [https://doi.org/10.1007/s10502-021-09358-z Decoding the Cauzin Softstrip: a case study in extracting information from old media.] Reimsbach, M., Aycock, J. Arch Sci 21, 281–294 (2021).
 
* [https://doi.org/10.1007/s10502-021-09358-z Decoding the Cauzin Softstrip: a case study in extracting information from old media.] Reimsbach, M., Aycock, J. Arch Sci 21, 281–294 (2021).
 +
* [https://mirrors.apple2.org.za/ftp.apple.asimov.net/documentation/hardware/io/cauzin_softstrip/Cauzin%20Softstrip%20StripWare%20Stripper%20Software%20Manual.pdf Cauzin Softstrip StripWare Stripper Software Manual]
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* [https://mirrors.apple2.org.za/ftp.apple.asimov.net/images/hardware/io/ Cauzin Softstrip Reader Software]

Revision as of 11:57, 14 October 2023

File Format
Name Datastrip Code
Ontology
Released 1985

{{{caption}}}


Datastrip Code, originally Softstrip, is reportedly the first 2D bar code symbology, released in 1985. (But the comedy book, The 80s: A Look Back, published in 1979, had fake 2D bar codes in it.) The intended purpose was as a way for magazines to publish computer-readable data, such as program listings (which, in those days, were commonly printed in computer magazines such that the user would have to type them in).

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