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  2. Honeywell UOP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeywell_UOP

    Honeywell UOP, formerly known as UOP LLC or Universal Oil Products, is an American multi-national company developing and delivering technology to the petroleum refining, gas processing, petrochemical production, and major manufacturing industries. The company's roots date back to 1914, when the revolutionary Dubbs thermal cracking process ...

  3. Universal Product Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Product_Code

    A UPC barcode. The Universal Product Code (UPC or UPC code) is a barcode symbology that is used worldwide for tracking trade items in stores.. The chosen symbology has bars (or spaces) of exactly 1, 2, 3, or 4 units wide each; each decimal digit to be encoded consists of two bars and two spaces chosen to have a total width of 7 units, in both an "even" and an "odd" parity form, which enables ...

  4. Global Trade Item Number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Trade_Item_Number

    The EAN-8 code is an eight-digit barcode used usually for very small articles, such as chewing gum, where fitting a larger code onto the item would be difficult. Note: the equivalent UPC small format barcode, UPC-E, encodes a GTIN-12 with a special Company Prefix that allows for "zero suppression" of four zeros in the GTIN-12. The GS1 encoding ...

  5. Wrigley Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrigley_Company

    The company was founded on April 1, 1891, in Chicago, Illinois by William Wrigley Jr. Wrigley's gum was traditionally made out of chicle, sourced largely from Central America. In 1952, in response to Decree 900, land reforms attempting to end feudal working conditions for peasant farmers in Guatemala, Wrigley's discontinued purchasing chicle ...

  6. UFP Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFP_Industries

    In 2021, the company had over 200 locations in eight countries with 15,000+ employees and sales of $8.6 billion. The company is listed in the Fortune 1000 list of America's largest corporations as of 2022, [1] and in the 2005 Forbes magazine's Platinum 400 ranking of the best-performing U.S. companies with annual revenue of more than $8 billion ...

  7. Weaver Popcorn Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver_Popcorn_Company

    The Weaver Popcorn Company, based in Van Buren, Indiana, is one of the largest popcorn companies in the United States. History [ edit ] Founded in 1928 by Ira E. Weaver, whose family still controls the company, it develops, grows, processes, packages, and ships a variety of popcorn products for sale around the world.

  8. Radio-frequency identification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-frequency_identification

    The tracing of products is an important feature that is well supported with RFID tags containing a unique identity of the tag and the serial number of the object. This may help companies cope with quality deficiencies and resulting recall campaigns, but also contributes to concern about tracking and profiling of persons after the sale.

  9. GS1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GS1

    GS1 is a not-for-profit, international organization developing and maintaining its own standards for barcodes and the corresponding issue company prefixes. The best known of these standards is the barcode, a symbol printed on products that can be scanned electronically. GS1 has 118 local member organizations and over 2 million user companies.