Quoth michael.shipett@umich.edu:
One of the computer magazines ("Compute"?) in the '80s used to supply source in a bar code format which was readily scanned into
Actually, BYTE used to publish things in "BYTEcode", a simple barcode system (narrow for 0, wide for 1, or something like that, no modulation of the gap like you find in UPC) and they had articles spread over several years on how to build simple readers, both hardware side and software side. (One even involved wrapping the page around a coffee can, placing it on a turntable, and then having a latching device to move the wand "up" one "track" on signal from the computer... so it could automatically retry bad tracks...) If people really care to resurrect it, I could go digging, email me if you'd like me to try. I don't think BYTE ever had any trouble with exporting it -- but then, I don't recall ever seeing crypto software in that form. (Carl Helmers, one of the founders of BYTE, is on the net these days, and might have useful input...) Quoth tcmay@netcom.com:
easily OCRable font---I think the suggestion was that OCR-A and OCR-B, or somesuch, are optimized for this (one would think so from the names, but I had thought they had something to do with the magnetic ink printing on checks...).
Magnetic ink printing is done with MICR fonts (Magnetic Ink Character Recognition, or something like that... Under version 10 of the X Window System, there was a screen font based on MICR. Pretty ugly.) The OCR fonts really are designed for OCR... I don't recall the distinction between A and B, I think the latter actually has lower case as well as upper case :-), but you can find an OCR font for TeX/MetaFont in one of the standard places (archie CTAN if you don't have a place to start from...) There are also print-wheels (remember daisywheel printers?) for the font, and many of the Computer Output Microfiche services from the 70's and 80's printed all microfiche in one of the OCR fonts for easy future retrieval. Anyone out there have experience with modern OCR systems (not the highest tech Kurzweil units, but something your average hacker could get cheap for his PC or Mac) and know if OCR fonts are even worth the trouble these days? I'd guess that a good monospace Courier font would be just as readable to modern scanners. After all, Dr. Dobbs (April 1994) has listings for Blowfish encryption code, in C, in about a 6pt Courier font; I note, however, that they also have them up for ftp (ftp://ftp.mv.com/pub/ddj/1994.04/blowfish.asc) so perhaps it doesn't matter how easy it is to scan. _Mark_ <eichin@paycheck.cygnus.com> ... just me at home ...