Pointer: Xerox glyphs encoding process. Publication: The New York Times, July 10, 1994; Section 3; Business; p. 9. Title: Smart Paper Documents for the Electronic Age. Subhead: A new coding method hides computer data in plain view, By: John Holusha. A quote from an illustration: A Xerox technology, known as glyphs, would enable paper business documents to carry thousands of characters of information hidden in unobtrusive gray patterns that can appear as backgrounds or shading patterns. Glyphs could be used for encoding machine-readable data onto paper documents.
"jy" == John Young <jya@pipeline.com> writes [with some deletions]: jy> Pointer: Xerox glyphs encoding process. jy> Publication: The New York Times, July 10, 1994; Section 3; jy> A Xerox technology, known as glyphs, would enable paper ...[rest deleted] An half-page article on this also appeared in Scientific American, April '94, I think (that's the only recent one I can't find at the moment). It was in ``Science and the Citizen'' or ``Science and Business.'' michael
participants (2)
-
John Young -
michael shiplett