Image | |
EAN-13 | 9786302032178 |
Product Name | Dodge City [VHS] |
Category | Electronics / Photography: A/V Media: Movie / TV |
Amazon.com | Buy on Amazon ~ 6302032172 |
Price New | 9.95 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Price Used | 2.41 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Cast | Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Ann Sheridan, Bruce Cabot, Frank McHugh |
Binding | VHS Tape |
Format | Color, NTSC |
Run Time | 104 minutes |
Long Description | He crossed blades with Basil Rathbone in CAPTAIN BLOOD, rode for queen and empire in THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE and soared with the ROYAL FLYING CORPS in THE DAWN PATROL. But would America accept a handsome, Aussie-accented lead in a Western? Jack Warner had his doubts. So did Errol Flynn. But when DODGE CITY'S dust settled, Flynn was in as a cowboy hero. Flynn shouldn't have doubted. Nothing pleases like the all-out excitement of the Technicolor West, and that's what DODGE CITY provides. Flynn plays trail boss Wade Hatton, who eventually accepts the sheriff's job in a trigger-happy town...and inherits a hornet's nest of troubles with the Surrett gang. Bullets and fists fly. Flynn whups the villains in a gunfight on a barreling, flame-engulfed train. And when all is said, done, roped, stamped and shot to the highest cowboy heavens, there was Western hero in a town Hollywood! |
Similar Items | 0085391188216: Errol Flynn Westerns Collection |
Created | 03-12-2013 12:26:22am |
Modified | 05-01-2020 9:13:39pm |
MD5 | c2bb907f6c6d526bca6259240595954b |
SHA256 | 4d3056496e26b703ef09767a4394a19df65b0779a63c7761b0227a14c6b4d6f3 |
Search Google | by EAN or by Title |
Query Time | 0.0084412 |
An article of interest
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MSI Barcodes
This symbology was developed by the MSI Data Corporation and is based on the Plessey Code symbology. MSI is most often used in warehouses and inventory control.
This is a continuous non-self-checking symbology meaning it has no predetermined length and there is no validation built into the barcode itself. If you want to validate the data stored in the barcode, you would need to use a check digit. Mod 10 is the most common check digit used with MSI but you can also use mod 1010 or mod 1110. It is allowed but generally not a good idea to omit the check digit all together.
There is a start marker which is represented by three binary digits 110 (where 1 is black and 0 is white). There is also a stop marker which is represented by four binary digits 1001. The remaining markers represent the numeric digits 0-9 (no text or special characters) and each digit is represented by twelve binary digits. Below is a table that describes all of the possible markers. The start and stop markers are the main difference between MSI and Plessey. That and the fact that MSI only covers digits 0-9. You can read these stripes as a binary values where 110 is binary 1 and 100 is binary 0. The stop marker simply has an extra bit on the end.
Character | Stripe Bits | Binary Value |
START | 110 | 1 |
0 | 100100100100 | 0000 |
1 | 100100100110 | 0001 |
2 | 100100110100 | 0010 |
3 | 100100110110 | 0011 |
4 | 100110100100 | 0100 |
5 | 100110100110 | 0101 |
6 | 100110110100 | 0110 |
7 | 100110110110 | 0111 |
8 | 110100100100 | 1000 |
9 | 110100100110 | 1001 |
STOP | 1001 | 0 + extra stripe |
To create a graphical barcode using this process, you can simply string together a series of 1 and 0 graphic images once you have calculated what your barcode should look like using the table shown above. You can view the source code of this page if you want to see how we created the example shown below.
Code | [start]375[stop] |
Bits: | 110 100100110110 100110110110 100110100110 1001 |
Graphic: |
This is just an example of one way to perform the graphic encoding. It is often easier to just draw the lines instead of tacking together individual images. If you would like to create free MSI barcodes, please visit our barcode generator page. You can save the images you make and use them as needed.