The invention relates to printing composite images that can contain large amounts of information, optionally including redundant information, in an eye-pleasing format. The composite images provide high information density, with redundancy, in a highly reliable and visually pleasing format. The composite images are achieved with a novel arrangement of largely invisible, machine-readable postage evidencing information, e.g., Information Based Indicia (IBI) images containing 2-D bar code information, and dark, visible images containing human-readable postage information, which typically includes address information. The images can be printed using conventional ink jet printers.
Postage evidencing information, including IBI images, is a significant feature of the Information-Based Indicia Program (IBIP) implemented by the United States Postal Service (USPS) as a distributed trusted system. The IBIP includes open IBI postage evidencing systems, which can apply postage in addition to performing other functions not possible with conventional postage machines. The IBIP requires printing high density, two-dimensional (2-D) bar codes, such as PDF417 bar codes, on mailpieces. The requirements for printing a PDF417 2-D bar code are set forth in The Uniform Symbology Specification. The Postal Service expects the IBIP to provide cost-effective assurance of postage payment for each mailpiece processed. IBI images comprise certain human readable information and two-dimensional (2-D) bar code information, which can contain such assurance. However, printed information is often obscured, diminishing its reliability even with error correction technology. There is a need for a high-density image format that includes both human readable and bar code information with high reliability.
The USPS has published specifications for the IBIP such as PERFORMANCE CRITERIA FOR INFORMATION-BASED INDICIA AND SECURITY ARCHITECTURE FOR OPEN IBI POSTAGE EVIDENCING SYSTEMS (PCIBI-O), dated Jan. 12, 1999; PERFORMANCE CRITERIA FOR INFORMATION-BASED INDICIA AND SECURITY ARCHITECTURE FOR CLOSED IBI POSTAGE METERING SYSTEMS (PCIBI-C), dated Feb. 23, 2000; and PERFORMANCE CRITERIA FOR INFORMATION-BASED INDICIA PROGRAM (IBIP) SYSTEMS EMPLOYING CENTRALIZED POSTAL SECURITY DEVICES, dated Aug. 17, 2000; (collectively referred to herein as the “IBIP Specifications”). The IBIP includes interfacing user (customer), postal and vendor infrastructures, which are the system elements of the program. The term “postage evidencing information” is meant to include IBI images meeting the current IBIP Specifications as well as alternative formats. The IBIP Specifications require a minimum bar code read rate of 99.5% and place the responsibility on each IBIP vendor to meet this requirement.
A user infrastructure, which typically resides at the user's site, can comprise a postage security device (PSD) coupled to a host system. The PSD is a secure processor-based accounting device that dispenses and accounts for postal value stored therein. The host system (Host) may be a personal computer (PC) or a meter-based host processor. Alternatively, the PSD can be located on a server remote from the user. Wherever the PSD is located, it would be desirable for IBIP indicium to be printed using an open system comprised of conventional desk-top and other ink jet printers not dedicated to postage, but this capability has not been fully realized without sacrificing readability or the visual appearance of the printed mailpiece.
The IBIP Specifications permit large format IBI images, e.g., 2-D bar codes, but there are several practical limits to the use of images that overlap conventional address information. For example, black and other dark colored inks tend to quench the fluorescence from invisible inks. Thus, if conventional address information overlaps with the IBI image, the IBI image could lose reliability and fall outside of the Specifications. Also, simple smudging of an envelope can have the same effect. The provision of error correction technology can provide a margin of protection but as conventionally employed, due to its mathematical underpinnings, must operate from a limited data set. It would be desirable to provide a technology that supplemented and, preferably, enhanced error correction technology.
The need for high resolution has posed significant technical challenges. Current systems are challenged to provide a suitable combination of convenience, acceptable appearance and high readability at high information densities. In U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/413,096, filed concurrently herewith, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, there is described a system which enables printing large amounts of information on a mailpiece without causing the mailpiece to become unsightly due to the presence of too much printing in a small space. The system employs luminescent invisible or lightly colored ink for printing at least a portion of the bar code portions of the information. This system has an advantage that attempts to maximize print information in an invisible 2-D bar code will not affect the human readable portion; but, unless provision is made for redundancy for the 2-D bar code information, problems can still occur.
When using invisible, fluorescent ink for printing the 2-D bar code, the bar code will not obscure the human readable printed information, but the human readable printed information can obscure the bar code. Overlap of the 2-D bar code and the printed conventional human readable address information can diminish the readability of the 2-D bar code or other information to the extent that even error correction codes cannot obtain the required read rates. Typically, suitable fluorescent inks irradiate in the red or infrared range when excited by ultraviolet light. But, because black and other dark visible inks tend to quench fluorescence, any overprinting of dark ink on a fluorescent ink can cause obscuration to the point of diminishing or destroying readability.
There remains a need for a method that provides machine-readable IBI images containing both large format 2-D bar code information with high levels of error correction in invisible or light colored luminescent ink, along with conventionally printed address and postage information to provide increased read rates and the provision of high information density without obscuring any one component. It would be desirable in this context to provide especially enhanced readability with a high contrast of the fluorescent image in a format that enabled improved read rates in the presence of obscured information.
It is an object of the invention to provide a method for printing postal and other information with a high information density in a visually pleasing and highly reliable form.
It is another object of the invention to provide a method for printing composite images that can contain large amounts of information, including redundant information, in an eye-pleasing format.
It is another object of the invention to provide a method for printing on a document composite images containing largely invisible, machine-readable information, such as postage-evidencing symbology, in a format that enables provision of significant redundant information without interference or overlapping with the dark, visible images printed on the document, such as address and postage information printed on an envelope.
It is another object of invention to provide for “redundancy”, which goes beyond mere mathematical error correction technology and provides the ability to recover obscured bar code or human readable information.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide a system that can produce machine-readable code, for example, postage-evidencing symbology containing both large format 2-D bar code information and address information with a maximum level of error correction code possible to provide increased read rates and the provision of high information density, permitting the printing of information redundant with that otherwise printed, without obscuring any one component.
These and other objects are accomplished by the invention, which provides improvements for printing machine-readable information, for example, postage-evidencing symbology, and visible address information on a document such as a mailpiece.
The method of the invention comprises: determining document, e.g., envelope, size (input envelope size), determining location and area of text and graphics to be printed with visible ink, determining areas on the document where no text or graphics will be printed in visible ink (“available area”), determining maximum size and, preferably error correction code level of 2-D bar code that will fit in each available area on the document, generating bitmap for at least one 2-D bar code to be printed in at least one of the available areas, printing a 2-D bar code in the largest available area, and printing at least one additional 2-D bar code in a second available area to include information redundant with that printed elsewhere. The second bar code can be sized for maximum size based on the second available area.
The method has a number of preferred aspects, many of which are described below and shown in the accompanying drawings. The present invention is not limited to the preferred embodiment of printing on a mailpiece. The present invention is suitable for printing machine-readable code on any type of document.
The invention will be better understood and its advantages will become more apparent from the following description, especially when read in light of the accompanying drawing, wherein:
The invention relates to printing composite images that can contain large amounts of information on mailpieces, such as mailpiece 10 illustrated in
Referring to
The presence of an FIM 20 adds another level of complexity and is currently required by United States Postal Service IBI Specifications to be part of the IBI image so that the USPS Advanced Facer Canceller may detect the presence of an IBI mailpiece so as to sort the mailpiece properly. In the United States, the required FIM is a pattern of vertical bars printed in the upper right portion of the mailpiece, to the left of the indicia. As currently specified, the United States Postal Service FIM is large, taking up approximately 20% of the proposed IBI image. A FIM uses a large amount of envelope space, which restricts the amount of information that can conveniently and neatly be presented in the IBI image. Accordingly, the space remaining for other 2-D bar code information is at a premium. Optional FIM's are permitted, but can yet further diminish the space available for a 2-D bar code.
The address block 14 of a mailpiece is the primary source of address information and contains a human-readable address and preferably includes a Delivery Point Bar Code (DPBC), shown schematically as 22. It is typically printed in black or other dark-colored ink. A DPBC is formed by adding 10 bars (representing two additional digits) to a standard ZIP+4 code. The ZIP+4 code is a single field of 52 bars consisting of a frame bar, a series of 25 bars that represent the correction digit, and a final frame bar. The DPBC or other POSTNET (POSTal Numeric Encoding Technique) bar code can be printed just about anywhere on the address side of the mailpiece that is at least ⅛th inch from any edge. Typically, it is printed in the upper portion of the address above the recipients name as shown in
The 2-D bar codes, schematically illustrated as 12 and 12a, are codes capable of being read in the horizontal and vertical directions. To achieve this objective, they are comprised of arranged geometric modules, such as squares, capable of encoding digital information. Typically, the modules forming a 2-D bar code image block are square and solidly imprinted, but can be of other effective configurations. As needed, 2-D bar codes can optionally be provided with information to provide a variety of needs, including for redundancy of postage or address information as well as security and validation codes.
Referring now to
The exemplary 2-D bar codes 12 and 12a arrangement printed on a mailpiece 10 in
The invention has particular applicability to open IBI postage evidencing systems; i.e., those using personal computers, which have the ability to print postage but are not dedicated to that purpose, and using conventional ink jet printers. In an open IBI postage evidencing system, the size of the envelope and the footprint of the images to be printed on the envelope (typically return address, recipient address, add slogan and postage) are known. The 2-D bar code images as illustrated as 12 and 12a, are preferably printed with luminescent ink of the type described in the previously noted U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/413,096, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,837,042, to Lent, et al. or other patents such as U.S. Pat. No. 6,402,986 to Jones II, et al., and are conveniently printed by ink jet print means. The system is designed to the greatest possible use of available real estate on an envelope by permitting a 2-D bar code printed with invisible ink to overlap human readable information. The invention provides for the use of a higher level of error correction in the 2-D bar code that will result in a higher read rate of the bar code.
To maintain readability of all elements, it is preferred that the postage-evidencing information 18 not overlap with information in the address block 14 and/or a barcode clear zone 24 when the piece bears a DPBC 22 in the address block 14. As noted above, an optional FIM 20a can be printed with an ink having the correct wavelength to be read by mail processing equipment, such as a facer-canceller.
The invention provides an envelope that can be visually acceptable with high information density, and the invention enables adding complexity without sacrificing readability or reliability. It is a distinct advantage of the invention that the composite images can optionally include redundant information to provide more “resiliency” to image or envelope damage. The invention can print a plurality of redundant 2-D bar codes to better enable maintenance of high read rates.
The method of the invention is designed to determine available real estate on the envelope and print at least primary and a first auxiliary 2-D bar code with invisible ink at a size pre-determined based on the available real estate. Computations, selections and comparisons are facilitated by a digital computer having suitable reference values stored, but can be assisted as need be or as is convenient by a skilled technician with knowledge of the necessary available information and result criteria. Thus, where the process calls for determining the size of an envelope or other mailpiece, this can be accomplished by a technician noting that all mailings in a particular group are number 10 envelopes, or the like, without the need to actually measure each envelope.
It is a distinct advantage of the invention that the composite images utilize a plurality of large-format 2-D bar codes with the maximum amount of error correction available for the intended area. This enables the inclusion of redundant information to provide more “resiliency” in the event of envelope damage. It can, additionally, by providing error correction coding, permit maintenance of high read rates despite damage to otherwise critical information. Thus, if a portion of the information in the machine-readable postage-evidencing symbology block becomes obscured due to poor printing or handling, the primary image 12 or auxiliary image 12a can have redundant information available.
The primary bar code 12 contains the usual postal and address information normally associated with an IBI image. The auxiliary bar code 12a can contain a variety of useful, but optional, information as well as simply repeating the IBI data in the primary bar code 12.
The method of the invention can utilize any practical number of auxiliary 2-D bar codes. The number and location of the auxiliary bar codes will depend on the amount of available space on the envelope or other mailpiece as well as the need or desire to provide additional information. The individual bar codes can be printed to contain information for a specific purpose solely served by an individual bar code. In addition, one or more of the bar codes can be provided with information that is intended to be read and utilized in concert. The bar codes of the invention can be printed with an auxiliary FIM, e.g., 20a in
The above description is intended to enable the person skilled in the art to practice the invention. It is not intended to detail all of the possible modifications and variations, which will become apparent to the skilled worker upon reading the description. It is intended, however, that all such modifications and variations be included within the scope of the invention, which is seen in the above description and otherwise defined by the following claims. The claims are meant to cover the indicated elements and steps in any arrangement or sequence, which is effective to meet the objectives, intended for the invention, unless the context specifically indicates the contrary.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/413,877 filed Apr. 15, 2003 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,948,660. This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. section 119(e) from Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/436,930, filed Dec. 30, 2002, entitled METHOD FOR IMPROVING THE READABILITY OF COMPOSITE IMAGES, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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1035515 | Sep 2000 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060022050 A1 | Feb 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60436930 | Dec 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10413877 | Apr 2003 | US |
Child | 11235326 | US |