From Hieroglyphs to Xerox Glyphs
January 25th, 2005

Researchers at Xerox PARC have developed a new way to imbed machine-readable information in printed documents. According to this article from Sci-Tech Today, “Digital Evolution Continues with Xerox Glyphs,” their dataglyphs are composed only of forward (/) or backward (\) slashes — similar to the zeros and ones used in binary code.

These dataglyphs could replace bar codes or be used in faxes, easing the way of routing information in a large company. Xerox is already using these dataglyphs for several projects, including one in Latin America to reduce check fraud. The company also has started an experiment named ‘GlyphSeal’ for two-sided documents, one for human eyes, and the other for machines.

Read more for other details, references and a dataglyph carrying — and hiding — the title of this entry. And try to build a “Smart Mobs” dataglyph…

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Comments
1 - lorenzo

It really works. Took a blurry camphone picture of a dataglyph - Sony Ericcson k700i with my camera shake. Uploaded to laptop - Windows XP. Changed the JPEG to a BMP. Sent this for decoding. It took longer than the demo dataglyph to decode. But it worked, the message was all there. Mobile possibilities from the wonderful people at PARC.