WhyNot?

Car BarCode

Category: Security
Responses: 1 (1 in support, 0 neutral, 0 in opposition)
Number of views: 534
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Most cars in the Philippines are full of stickers in the rear and front view mirrors. I have thought of an idea that will use a unique car bar code sticker that is universally accepted by all establishments in the country. Lets say entering a private village instead of leaving your license you can just scan the bar code and all the needed information will be derived from the Car bar code. Each car be registered to multiple drivers so that all needed info is fully stored. this will help you see better cause there are less stickers on your car. It will also help the LTO collect fines from traffic penalties that you have incurred in each registration renewal. Basically it will be your universal car and personal ID.

jorgeinovate, Jan 30 2006

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A more flexible extension of this concept would be a variation of the "Easy Pass" technology used to pay tolls by readouts from the vehicle. If each licence plate contained a responder it would be much easier for tolls and legal enforcers to identify a vehicle without resorting to cameras which require a human to intervene to discern the licence plate number. Also automatic readouts could locate stolen vehicles very quickly as they passed readout points.

sand, Jan 30 2006

Yes. It will be very convenient and suitable for everyone. it will also be hassle-free. No need to stop, leave license, and wait for few minutes before you can enter the village and go wherever you are heading. Also, leaving licenses can sometimes lead to the usual issue-- licenses being misplaced.

isa, Feb 01 2006

In a more politically an economically developed society, it might work.

But with countries like The Phillipines, you'd be hard pressed to get the varoius agencies to sit down and agree on a standard (likely the sale of those tags are a form of revenue to those agencies, something that means a lot to the economy of that sort of county), and the public to stick to it.

classicsat, Mar 08 2006