Consumerium talk:Intermediate barcode page: Difference between revisions

    From Consumerium development wiki R&D Wiki
    (whooa. hold your horses)
     
    (mostly right, but, if there are more than 2% to 5% exceptions, the barcode combines product and company information)
    Line 1: Line 1:
    Let's not mix [[barcode]] and [[channel]] issues. The [[retail]] locations have no [[barcode]], they have a [[company]] that owns them and [[companies]] they work with and a classification within the chain hierarchy (sometimes) which identifies the service / product range of a particular location and naturally an adress. --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 18:35, 28 Aug 2004 (EEST)
    Let's not mix [[barcode]] and [[channel]] issues. The [[retail]] locations have no [[barcode]], they have a [[company]] that owns them and [[companies]] they work with and a classification within the chain hierarchy (sometimes) which identifies the service / product range of a particular location and naturally an address. --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 18:35, 28 Aug 2004 (EEST)
     
    :If they really are separate, absolutely right.  However they are not quite separate:  Sometimes big purchasers apply their own barcodes or different packaging has different barcodes.  If this is *VERY* uncommon then we can avoid mixing them, as you say.  If it is even going on 5% of the time they we have to think of the barcode as the product of channel and product information at once.
     
    :This is a question some [[researcher]] should be able to resolve.
     
    :By the way it is good to get past various [[power structure]] issues and get back to real work...

    Revision as of 15:40, 28 August 2004

    Let's not mix barcode and channel issues. The retail locations have no barcode, they have a company that owns them and companies they work with and a classification within the chain hierarchy (sometimes) which identifies the service / product range of a particular location and naturally an address. --Juxo 18:35, 28 Aug 2004 (EEST)

    If they really are separate, absolutely right. However they are not quite separate: Sometimes big purchasers apply their own barcodes or different packaging has different barcodes. If this is *VERY* uncommon then we can avoid mixing them, as you say. If it is even going on 5% of the time they we have to think of the barcode as the product of channel and product information at once.
    This is a question some researcher should be able to resolve.
    By the way it is good to get past various power structure issues and get back to real work...