David Jarrett Collins (February 11, 1936 – March 12, 2022) was an inventor and businessman whose career was focused on bringing barcode technology into the mainstream. While at Sylvania in 1960, he led a team that developed the first functional barcode system for tracking railroad cars, and subsequently worked on developing laser barcode systems.
Early life and education
David Jarrett Collins was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He attended La Salle College High School, graduating in 1953,[2] and graduated from Villanova University in 1957 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering.[3] He received his Master of Science in Industrial Management from MIT's Sloan School of Management in 1959.[4]
Career
After his graduate studies at MIT were complete, Collins worked for Sylvania Electric Products (Sylvania) in Waltham, MA. While at Sylvania, he managed the development of the first commercial linear barcode: KarTrak, for Automatic Car Identification (ACI).[5] KarTrak used blue and red reflective stripes, as well as black and white stripes attached to the side of railroad cars, encoding a six-digit company identifier and a four-digit car number.[6][7] At the peak, 95 percent of rail cars had a KarTrak code on the side.[8]
In 1961, Collins left Sylvania to start the Computer Identics Corporation with a goal of creating a laser scanner capable of reading small barcode labels as seen today.
In 1969, Computer Identics sold the world’s first commercial laser scanner to General Motors, who used it to identify and record car components on a Pontiac assembly line.[9] That same year Computer Identics installed scanners and a Digital Equipment CorporationPDP-8 mini-computer at a General Trading Company plant in Carlstadt, NJ to track and assemble grocery orders.[10] It scanned boxes on a conveyor belt so they could be diverted to the appropriate loading dock. In 1971, Computer Identics delivered the first scanners used for package recognition, early versions of the ones now used by delivery companies.[11]
The New York City Marathon approached Collins about using barcode for scoring in 1977.[12] At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, organizers used Computer Identics scanners to read barcodes printed on the badges of athletes, journalists, and staff members. Also in 1984, Collins' company, Computer Identics, developed Mac-Barcode® Software, the first WYSIWYG barcode label composition software, for the newly introduced AppleMacintosh.[13]
Following his time at Computer Identics, Collins formed Data Capture Institute,[14] a research and consulting firm specializing in automatic identification technology. There he and his associates provided system design and support to clients including the Uniform Code Council (GS1). In his work for GS1, he developed the industry standard application identifier (AI) dictionary that classifies data collection formats.[15]
Collins served as Chairman of the Board for A2B Tracking Solutions, of Portsmouth, RI.
Patents
Identification and registration system, (1972)[16]
Collins, David Jarrett (2017-11). "The Father of the Barcode". TedXBeaconStreet
United States Congress Senate Committee on Commerce, Special Freight Car Shortage Subcommittee (1972). "Freight Car Shortages: Hearings Before the Special Subcommittee on Freight Car Shortages of the Committee on Commerce"
^US 3673389, Kapsambelis, Christos Basil & Collins, David Janett, "Identification and registration system", published 1972-06-27, assigned to Computer Identics Corp.
^US 3743819, Kapsambelis, Christos B. & Collins, David J., "Label reading system", published 1973-07-03, assigned to Computer Identics Corp.
^US 6237051, Collins, David Jarrett, "Asset tracking within and across enterprise boundaries", issued 2001-05-22, assigned to Data Capture Institute
^US 7639144, Kapsambelis, Christos B.; Collins, Peter M. & Collins, David J., "System and method of validating asset tracking codes", issued 2009-12-29, assigned to a2b Tracking Solutions
^US 8981905, Collins, David J., "Secure asset tracking system", published 2015-03-17, assigned to David J. Collins and a2b Tracking Solutions