AIDC 100 ARCHIVE: OVERVIEW
HISTORY
Bar codes, smart cards, radio frequency identification (RFID), biometrics, and magnetic
stripe are technologies that encompass the rapidly evolving science and industry of
Automatic Identification and Data Capture (AIDC). This field of high technology uses
advances in scanning and computer processes to capture information quickly and accurately
in an automated manner. AIDC technology is ubiquitous, from driver's licenses to credit
cards, and it revolutionized the way we live.
But who is recording the history and documenting the work of the scientists, businesses, and organizations that developed these technologies? That was the concern of George and Teddy Goldberg when they approached Stony Brook University in the late 1990s about establishing an archive. As pioneers in the field of AIDC and publishers of SCAN Newsletter, one of the industry's first trade publication, the couple wanted to ensure that the history of AIDC would be documented and preserved.
Stony Brook University Libraries understood the need to collect, catalog, and make this unique history accessible. In 2000, Special Collections established an archive for AIDC and is one of only a few institutions in the United States that has acquired materials pertaining to this field.
The AIDC 100 Archive is named after the AIDC 100, "a not-for-profit, self-sustaining, non-political, international organization of automatic
identification and data capture (AIDC) professionals and others who have significantly
contributed to the growth and advancement of the industry." George Goldberg was a founding member of the AIDC 100.
The archive comprises personal papers of leaders in the industry, trade publications,
journals, books, and artifacts. Diverse formats including print, audio-visual, and
artifacts are represented the archive. In 2006, Special Collections digitized and
published the original and international edition of SCAN Newsletter founded in 1977 by George and Teddy Goldberg. Detailed finding aids and related resources
provide researchers with comprehensive information about the collections at Stony
Brook University.
MISSION STATEMENT
The AIDC 100 Archive at Stony Brook University is a curated collection of primary
source materials that documents the history of automatic identification and data
capture (AIDC).
ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS AT STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
- H. Sprague Ackley Collection SC 462 (in-process)
- Advanstar Communications, Inc. Collection SC 383
- AIDC 100 Collection SC 355
- AIM USA Collection SC 333
- David C. Allais Collection SC 441
- Paul Bergé Collection SC 336
- Kevin Berisso Collection SC 450
- Center for AutoID at Ohio University Collection SC 384
- Allan Gilligan Collection SC 338
- George Goldberg Collection SC 329
- GS1 US, OCR-B Collection SC 434
- William Hakanson Collection SC 395
- Craig K. Harmon Collection SC 451
- Robert La Moreaux Collection SC 357
- Andrew Longacre Collection SC 468
- Richard Meyers Collection SC 368
- Jud Miner Collection SC 394
- Benjamin Nelson Collection SC 363
GEORGE GOLDBERG MEMORIAL DIGITIZATION PROJECT
Visit the website for the project
Browse and search issues of SCAN Newsletter and SCAN International Edition
AIDC HISTORICAL TIMELINE
"The History of Automatic Identification", augmented and edited by David Allais, August 2015.
"RAISING THE BAR(CODE)": HISTORY OF AIDC TIMELINE EXHIBITION
Curated by Kristen Nyitray in 2010.
Panel 1: Introduction
Panel 2: 1895-1975
Panel 3: 1977-2009
MEMOIR PROJECT
- David Allais - CEO, Intermec (1973-1987); Founder, Pathguide Technologies
- Paul Bergé - President, Paul Bergé International, LLC
- A. John Esserian - Founder, Charecogn Systems (retired)
- James Fales - Founder and Director, Center for Automatic Identification, Ohio University
- George J. Laurer - Engineering Manager, IBM
- Richard B. Meyers - President, Delta Services
- Jud Miner - Consultant, Automation Associates
- Richard B. Meyers, compiler - Reflections on the 21st Anniversary of "Scan Quake" (October 17, 1989)
DOUGLAS EDGELL READING ROOM
In 1998, Gabriele A. Edgell established an endowment in memory of her late husband,
Douglas Edgell, President and Founder of Edgell Communications, one of the industry’s
largest business-to-business publishers. The endowment supports the ongoing stewardship
of the archive. The Douglas Edgell Reading Room is named in his honor.