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Universal Product Code
[ yoo-nuh-vur-suhl prod-uhkt kohdyoo-nuh-vur-suhl ]
noun
- a barcode that indicates price, product classification, etc., and can be read electronically, as at checkout counters in supermarkets. : UPC
Word History and Origins
Origin of Universal Product Code1
Example Sentences
Officially called the Universal Product Code, it made its debut in 1974 when a scanner registered 67 cents for a 10-pack of Wrigley’s Juicy Fruit chewing gum at a Marsh supermarket in Troy, Ohio.
The result, a zebralike pattern of vertical black lines, became the basis for the modern bar code — the Universal Product Code — which shook up everything from retail to air travel, marathon races to medical devices.
Later it helped to set up NASA, and helped to invent the Universal Product Code — the bar code.
That pattern became the basis for the Universal Product Code, which was adopted by a consortium of grocery companies in 1973, when cashiers were still punching in all prices by hand.
In the end, it took a massive effort – and massive investments – to get the Universal Product Code adopted by millions of manufacturers, distributors and retailers.
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