How easy it is to read 2D Barcodes, Surveyors?
Party ChiefThe emergence of 2D bar codes as means for packaging, porting and making information easily accessable could have a big impact on the land surveying industry in the future-and I mean near future. This is just a prediction, but like many of my recent 'hunches' this one is bound to materialize. Just imaginethe day when you'll be able to go out to a job, finish it, package the data up as a bar code and simply email the code to the office. At the office, the code is simply scanned and POW- your entire project unfolds in front of your boss's eyes.
A 2D (two-dimensional) barcode is a graphical image that stores information both horizontally -- as one-dimensional bar codes do -- and vertically. As a result of that construction, 2D codes can store up to 7,089 characters, significantly greater storage than is possible with the 20-character capacity of a unidimensional barcode.
2D barcodes are also known as quick response codes because they enable fast data access. 2D barcodes are often used in conjunction with smart phones. The user simply photographs a 2D barcode with the camera on a phone equipped with a barcode reader. The reader interprets the encoded URL, which directs the browser to the relevant information on a Web site. This capability has made 2D barcodes useful for mobile marketing. Some 2D barcode systems also deliver information in a message for users without Web access.
Here's a sampling how 2D barcodes are being used:
- Nike used 2D barcodes on posters along the route of an extreme sports competition. Mobile users captured barcodes to access sponsored pictures, video and data.
- Some newspapers include 2D barcodes on stories that link mobile users to developing coverage.
- 2D barcodes on products in stores link to product reviews.
- Some people post 2D barcodes that link to their blogs or Facebook pages.
See a simple demonstration of one use of 2D barcode:
Now I'm not saying that this 2D bar code revolution will not have far reaching privacy concerns. But what I am saying is that it is very interesting and could quite possibly be an option for data transfer and packaging in the near future. What do you think surveyors?
Video to accompany the 2D barcodes for land surveyors post: Get an overview on how easy it is to get to mobile content with the help of 2D Barcodes and Snappr.netYou need to be a member of Land Surveyors United - Surveying Education Community to add thoughts!
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