| ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION   TitleAIDC 100 Archive - David C. Allais Collection
 Collection NumberSC 441
 OCLC NumberIn-process
 CreatorDavid C. Allais
 
 Provenance
 Donated by David Allais in four accessions: 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2014.
 
 Extent,Scope, and Content Note
 The collection is comprised of 1.5 cubic feet of: documents, drafts meeting minutes,
                                 technical notes, newsletters, and artifacts pertaining to the Symbol Technical Advisory
                                 Committee, the Uniform Product Code, and the career of David Allais. The documents
                                 and artifacts date from 1975 to 2006.
 Arrangement and Processing NoteThe collection was processed by Kristen J. Nyitray, September 2012. Finding aid updated
                                    in April 2019 by Kristen J. Nyitray. Materials are arranged by format. Files were
                                    kept in the order they were received.
 Series 1: Documents
 Series 2: Artifacts
 LanguageEnglish
 Restrictions on AccessThe collection is open to researchers without restriction.
 
 Rights and Permissions
 Stony Brook University Libraries' consent to access as the physical owner of the collection
                                 does not address copyright issues that may affect publication rights. It is the sole
                                 responsibility of the user of Special Collections and University Archives materials
                                 to investigate the copyright status of any given work and to seek and obtain permission
                                 where needed prior to publication.
 Citation [Item], [Box], David C. Allais Collection, Special Collections and University Archives, Stony Brook University Libraries.
 Historical NoteDavid Allais (b. March 5, 1933) is an internationally recognized expert and inventor
                                 in the fields of bar coding and automatic identification and data capture. As vice
                                 president and later president and chief executive officer of Intermec, Inc. (NYSE:IN),
                                 he built the company from a small startup into the leading manufacturer of bar code
                                 and printing equipment. Prior to Allais' role at Intermec, he served as a manager
                                 for IBM. Most recently, Dr. Allais founded PathGuide Technologies, a Mukilteo, Washington-based
                                 developer of warehouse management systems for distributors.
 EducationBachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering, University of Arizona, 1954
 Master of Science, Mechanical Engineering, University of Arizona, 1958
 Master of Science, Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, 1962
 Doctor of Philosophy, Stanford University, 1965
 
 In 1988, Dr. Allais was awarded the Association for AutoMatic Identification and
                                 Mobility (AIM) Richard R. Dilling Award as a preeminent contributor to bar code technology
                                 and on October 16, 2009, Allais received the University of Arizona College of Engineering
                                 Lifetime Achievement Award. He is credited with creating five bar code symbologies:
                                 Code 39, Interleaved 2 of 5 (ITF), Code 11, Code 93 and Code 49. He is also named
                                 inventor on the following seven U.S. patents:
 
                                 Patent # 3,001,369, Hydraulic System for Driving Several Actuators, 1962, Assigned
                                    to IBM.Patent # 3,067,333, Motion Control Apparatus, Assigned to IBM.Patent # 3,670,145, Tape Feed System, 1972, Assigned to Intermec Corporation.Patent # 3,784,794, Electro-Optical Reader for Bar Codes, 1974, Assigned to National
                                    Bank Of Commerce of Seattle.Patent # 3,844,210, Multi-Color (bar code) Printer, 1974, Assigned to Intermec Corporation.Patent # 3,909,594, Circuit for Establishing a Reference Voltage in Bar Code Readers,
                                    1975, Assigned to Intermec Corporation.Patent # 4,794,239, Multi-Track Bar Code (Code 49), 1988, Assigned to Intermec Corporation.
                                    (source: entry for David Allais, Wikipedia) Dr. Allais actively supports industry standards groups and trade associations, including
                                 GS1 and AIM.  He is currently Chairman of AIDC 100, an association of leaders in the
                                 field of bar coding and RFID.  He has authored numerous technical papers and given
                                 lectures at domestic and international conferences. 
 Subjects
 Automatic identification and data capture
 Bar coding.
 Bar coding -- Equipment and supplies.
 System identification.
 Automatic data collection systems.
 INVENTORY Series 1: Documents 
 Box 1
 UPC (Uniform Product Code) Guidelines (manuals): January 1975-March 1975
 UPC Newsletter: September 1973-December 1977; published by Distribution Number Bank,
                                 Distribution Codes Inc., and Uniform Code Council (2 folders) note: STAC is the acronym
                                 for Symbol Technical Advisory Committee
 STAC meeting minutes: September 11, 1975-November 11, 1981 (2 folders)
 STAC subcommittee SC3 and SC4 documents: 1978-1984 (2 folders)
 Box 2 STAC documents and minutes: 1985-1987 (3 folders)
 STAC documents and drafts: 1987 (3 folders)
 STAC meeting: May 6, 1986
 STAC meeting: November 11, 1986
 Box 3 STAC documents: 1988-1993 (3 folders)
 Memoir: prepared for the AIDC 100 Archives Memoir Project by David C. Allais, September
                                 14, 2006
 
 Series 2: Artifacts Bar code label: NCR Colorbar retail labels, circa early 1970s
 Bar code label: Plessey bar code labels printed by an Intermec impact printer, 1972
 Bar code label: Codabar labels printed by an Intermec impact printer, 1973
 Bar code label: UPC-A labels printed by an Intermec impact printer, 1974
 Bar code label: Code 39 labels printed by and Intermec impact printer, circa 1975
 Bar code label: OCR-A labels printed by an Intermec impact printer, circa 1979
 Bar code label: produced for a Dick Butkus autographed 1963 game football, circa 1980
 Advertisement: Axicon's "The Tornado Wand" (1 leaf)
 Box 4 Intermec Bar Code Reader, Model 9300 and Operators Manual, April 1980
 Box 5Folder A-Some Reminiscing by Francis X Beck Jr. – work preceding selection of the
                                 UPC Symbol, 1965 through 1972
 Folder B-Reflected Light from Printed Bar Code – experiments at RCA, January 1970
 Folder C-Phase I Report, Grocery Industry Ad Hoc Committee, Universal Product Code,
                                 November 28, 1971
 Folder D-PIDAS Results – Measurements of commercial printing of grocery packaging
 Folder E-Executive Summary UPC’72 – R. Bert Gookin
 Folder F-Codabar Universal product Code Symbol – submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
                                 by Pitney Bowes
 Folder G-Addendum to Codabar UPC
 Folder H-Singer Five-Segment Wrap-Around Format – submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder I-Scanner, Inc. - submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder J-Scanner, Inc. Print Specification Supplement
 Folder K-RCA Bulls Eye Symbol – Preliminary - submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder L-IBM Proposed UPC Symbol - submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder M-IBM Proposed UPC Symbol Revision 2 - submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder N-Litton Half Bulls Eye - submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee
 Folder O-Press Release announcing the selection of the UPC Symbol – April 3, 1973
 Folder P-"The Characteristics and Decodability of the UPC Symbol," David Savir and
                                 George Laurer, IBM Systems Journal 1975
 Folder Q-"Cracking the Code," Marvin Mann for the 25 year anniversary of UPC.
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