[aprssig] APRS and barcodes
Brian Webster bwebster at wirelessmapping.comSat Oct 28 02:16:57 UTC 2006
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I think this has possibilities. We used to do checkpoints for a canoe race, this would work nice for that if the scan distance was good. This would work great for in building applications for search and rescue or ham fest applications. Just stick the bar code on the door or room entrance. Seems like this would be a natural extension of Bob's vicinity tracking. Would certainly be easier than setting up a bunch of deaf radios. This might also be good to improve the position accuracy problem in places like ham fests. It will be good to hear what other ideas people think of. Thank You, Brian N2KGC -----Original Message----- From: scott at opentrac.org [mailto:scott at opentrac.org] Sent: Friday, October 27, 2006 9:24 PM To: 'TAPR APRS Mailing List' Subject: [aprssig] APRS and barcodes Seems that serial barcode scanners are out of fashion these days. A cheap USB keyboard wedge type cost me about $50 on eBay, with shipping - has a max scan distance of about an inch, and a scan width not QUITE wide enough to scan an express mail tracking number. A very nice Symbol handheld serial laser scanner cost me under $20 with shipping. It works at a distance of about a foot, scans VERY wide barcodes, and is much sturdier than the cheap USB model. Anyway, I hooked it up to a Tracker2 and started seeing what I could do with it. There may be a way to configure the scanner (I haven't even looked up the manual yet), but as-is it doesn't send a carriage return at the end of a scan. So I tweaked the Tracker2 command console code a bit, and now it'll accept commands bracketed in /* */. So what does this mean? Well, for starters, you can print out lists of configuration commands and use the scanner to set up the tracker. This might be useful for events where you've got a bunch of them to configure - you can have a sheet printed out for each unit to be configured. Or just print the unique stuff (timeslot assignments, callsigns) and have a page of common configuration options. Since it waits for a terminating */ sequence, a single command could be composed of multiple barcode segments. For example, you could scan /*INTERVAL and then 30*/, 60*/, or 120*/. Since the T2 does messaging from the command line, you could use it to send canned messages to any of a list of recipients, including email addresses. Once I get some object creation code written, you ought to be able to use it to scan a race participant, for example, and have the tracker send an object identifying that participant at the current GPS position. Or you could do the reverse, and use the POSITION command to set the unit's fixed position, and wander around with a tracker and barcode scanner, scanning your current location instead of using a GPS receiver. Seems like that'd have limited applications, though. I'm just throwing this out there to see if it'd be useful to anyone, and to see if anyone else has any ideas for killer applications for it. If you think of anything interesting, let me know. Scott N1VG _______________________________________________ aprssig mailing list aprssig at lists.tapr.org https://lists.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig
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