(no title)
Ecco
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8 months ago
With a limit of 10 million different serial numbers, I wonder how China does it. I can't come up with a decent estimate, and maybe I'm way off. But with the growth of sellers like Shein or Temu, I wouldn't be surprised if they shipped that many parcels in like a single day ? Or at least in a timeframe short enough that they would have over 10 million shipped but yet-to-be-delivered parcels, effectively running out of tracking numbers.
Scoundreller|8 months ago
Or they have their own private courier do the last mile delivery too so it never touches any postal operator.
bravesoul2|8 months ago
zinekeller|8 months ago
The author has issued a correction, it's 100 million numbers per service indicator. But even then, it's probably not enough.
The boring answer is that your shipping options are either get untracked postal service (which the S10 standard does not apply) or use a private courier (which also does not use the S10 standard).
If you insist, you got two options for UPU-based postal tracking: normal e-commerce parcel aka H-codes, practically 2,300,000,000 trackable packages per year [1]. EMS is the other route, and there are another 2,300,000,000 trackable packages per year [2]. However, in my experience tracked postal delivery is only used in certain countries where it is more advantageous than private delivery (like until very recently in the US, for complicated reasons [3]), while other destinations has a more-than-willing private delivery partner (that is not the Big Three [4]) or even set up the delivery systems themselves.
1: 23 service indicators: HA-HW, HX-HZ are reserved for multilateral/bilateral use only
2: another 23 service indicators: EA-EW, EX-EZ are reserved for multilateral/bilateral use only
3: https://www.thewirechina.com/2020/11/22/delivering-chinas-ma... https://www.ft.com/content/a1233f3e-d21a-11e8-a9f2-7574db66b...
4: DHL, FedEx, and UPS
Sharlin|8 months ago
thebruce87m|8 months ago
Do you mean “bonkers”? Because “bollocks” in this case would mean “made up”.
wombatpm|8 months ago
somat|8 months ago
Plus a bonus rant: this is one of those things that looks like a number and as such you are tempted to use a number to store it, but its not, it's a string, you will never do math on it so it is not a number. see also: phone numbers, social security numbers, serial numbers.
and sheepish bonus update: there is a checksum, so math is done on it. wonder if the checksum makes more or less sense in base 36? probably less, the checksum almost looks base12-ish, the mod(11), but there are special cases for two digit values so it is probably base 10.
woooooo|8 months ago
xattt|8 months ago
mongol|8 months ago
omcnoe|8 months ago
benced|8 months ago
crtified|8 months ago