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johnsyn

02/19/13 7:51 AM

#14068 RE: rudolfo #14061

Yes, excellent read, thanks. Those who insist that there is nothing but looking for presence of a yellow mark or green one on a microchip indicating EOM or distributor are assuming too little. APDN made it clear that lot number and date mfr'd are there. Digital DNA scanner may not be part of those kits, but the markings they use right now is more than just a dot and in the part number, I'm betting.

Don't need a full DNA analysis if you have QR code info in that ink unless something looks clearly tampered, like sandblasting-

"There are many specialist hardware scanners for QR codes used in areas such as supply chain and logistics.

A scanner comprises a photo-optical scanner, a decoder chip, and some software on the end to receive the scanned decoded data.

This sounds complicated but in fact many modern mobile devices such as the iPhone and even some optical mice (of the computer peripheral type) are capable of reading a QR code.

A thermal printer uses four thermal dots to make one module. Since printer resolution is measured in dots per inch (dpi) – if you use a printer with a 600dpi resolution you can create QR codes with a module size of .17mm.[/i"]