Image | ![]() |
EAN-13 | 0027616131331 ![]() |
UPC-A | 027616131331 ![]() |
Product Name | Jezebel [Vhs] |
Category | Electronics / Photography: A/V Media: Music |
Short Description | Vhs |
Amazon.com | ![]() |
Price New | 3.02 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Price Used | 0.34 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Long Description | Bette Davis didn't get to play Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind , but she did get to play a troublesome Southern belle in William Wyler's 1938 Jezebel . Davis's character, a coquette fond of stirring up rivalries among the men, goes too far and loses her fiancé (Henry Fonda), but she finds atonement when she cares for him during illness. This handsome melodrama by Wyler (who later directed Davis in The Little Foxes ) is fully absorbing (John Huston contributed to the script), and Davis's carefully constructed performance does make one draw instant comparisons with Vivien Leigh in Gone with the Wind . --Tom Keogh |
Similar Items | 9786301586047: Ghost & Mrs. Muir [VHS] 9780800112813: Gilda [VHS] 9780790747194: The Letter [VHS] 9780793910472: Valley of the Dolls [VHS] 9780790743325: Dark Victory [VHS] 9786301965729: Dark Victory [VHS] 9780790743349: Now Voyager [VHS] 9780792837138: Now, Voyager [VHS] 9786303364773: Leave Her to Heaven [VHS] 9781555263072: Dark Mirror [Vhs] 9786301973298: Marked Woman [VHS] 9786301600866: Deception [VHS] |
Created | 07-01-2006 |
Modified | 04-28-2020 4:54:43pm |
MD5 | e2c8a71c5baa31f432fc7dce0bc88ebb |
SHA256 | 09c9525c67970b17f6514d2cf3981aaef7f7f9667049b13197721d2da0e034b3 |
Search Google | by EAN or by Title |
Query Time | 0.0329721 |
Article of interest
This symbology was developed by the Plessey Company in England. A variation of Plessey was used by the ADS Company and is known as Anker Code. Anker Code was used in European point of sale systems prior to the advent of EAN. Another variation is known as the MSI Code.
Plessey offers a full range of HEX digits 0-F. The bit pattern of the bits sets the high order bit at the right which is reverse of how we normally think of bits these days. (MSI puts the high order bit on the left).
The start bar is always "D" (1101) and the terminator can be two binary 1's (11) if the barcode is to be read from left to right only. If the barcode can be read in either direction the terminator will be a single binary 1 (1) and is followed by a reverse of the start character or the "B" (1011).
Digit | Strip Bits | Binary Value |
0 | 100100100100 | 0000 |
1 | 110100100100 | 1000 |
2 | 100110100100 | 0100 |
3 | 110110100100 | 1100 |
4 | 100100110100 | 0010 |
5 | 110100110100 | 1010 |
6 | 100110110100 | 0110 |
7 | 110110110100 | 1110 |
8 | 100100100110 | 0001 |
9 | 110100100110 | 1001 |
A | 100110100110 | 0101 |
B | 110110100110 | 1101 |
C | 100100110110 | 0011 |
D | 110100110110 | 1011 |
E | 100110110110 | 0111 |
F | 110110110110 | 1111 |
START | 110110100110 | 1101 |
STOP > | 110110 | 11 |
STOP < > | 110110100110110 | 11011 |
You can use the stripe bits can be used to generate the graphic pattern. If you want to see this trick, check out the MSI Code page. Plessey uses a cyclic (or polynomial) check code technique which is applied to the reading of barcode labels and transmission of data. This technique is a fair compromise between the extra redundancy and the error detecting power. Roughly one undetected error per hundred million 6 digit transactions.
If you would like to generate your own Plessey Barcode, please visit our free barcode generator page. Make your code, save it and use it how ever you like.