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barcodes

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The Scannable World, Part 3: Barcode Scanning In The Real World

By Sarah Perez / September 25, 2008 11:43 PM / Comments

This is the third part in a multi-part series about integrating the internet with the real world through barcode scanning technology.

In the first two articles we looked at the history of scanning barcodes with your mobile phone, newspaper print ads, and a new effort to bring barcodes to web printouts. Now we'll look at other uses of the technology including scanning products in store, scanning broadcast media, and even exchanging contact information with others through the use of barcodes.

The Scannable World, Part 2: Scanning Your Web Printouts

By Sarah Perez / September 25, 2008 05:00 AM / Comments

This is the second post in a multi-part series about integrating the internet with the real world.

In "The Scannable World: Mobile Phones As Barcode Scanners," we introduced the concept of using your phone to scan barcoded objects in the real world. We also touched on some of the history surrounding this technology. One of the issues with barcoded ads today is where you find them: newspapers, arguably a dying medium whose subscriber base isn't necessarily composed of cutting-edge early adopters. So how can barcodes make their way to the people who actually use the web and other modern technologies? One company thinks they have the answer.

The Scannable World: Mobile Phones As Barcode Scanners

By Sarah Perez / September 23, 2008 07:00 PM / Comments

Part 1: Will Barcodes Bridge The Gap Between Reality And The Net?

One of the promises of the mobile web was the possibility of being able to integrate the internet with the real world. One of the ways to accomplish this task is through the use of barcodes. The idea is that you take a picture of the barcode with your camera phone and you're then delivered to a mobile web site. This could effectively make anything - whether a poster, an ad, or an object - a virtual part of the world wide web. Although this technology has been available for years, it's only now with the birth of the smartphone, or more precisely, the next-gen smartphone, that the potential for this type of integration may finally be realized.

Dear Google: 2000 Called, It Wants Its Ad Format Back

By Josh Catone / January 29, 2008 01:52 AM / Comments

Dan Frommer over at Silicon Alley Insider reports that Google's latest effort to break into newspaper ad sales includes printed barcodes that can be scanned by readers to send them to web sites. That sounds very similar to failed plans of late-90s Internet/technology startup Digital Convergence, who saw their :CueCat barcodes appear in newspapers and magazines all over the US in 2000 to a fairly indifferent response by users.

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