Barclays Pingit now lets UK shoppers pay for web purchases using their smartphone

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Barclays Pingit is a neat multi-platform app for paying the odd bill or shooting over your share of Friday’s curry to a friend, regardless of which bank you use. Today, Barclays announced new ways businesses can use the payment platform: a “Pay with Barclays Pingit” button can now be added to websites and apps, which should shorten the time between impulse and transaction — anyone that regularly uses PayPal for online purchases will get the general idea. Also, if an advertisement should take someone’s fancy, the “buy it” feature allows that person to scan a QR code, check out product info, and complete the purchase then and there. It’s up to retailers to add these new options, of course, so don’t expect to find them everywhere from today. QR codes just won’t die, will they?

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Via: TheNextWeb

Microsoft Tag closing on August 19th 2015, reminds us all crappy things must end

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You know how QR Codes still aren’t really a thing? Just imagine how popular Microsoft’s proprietary alternative to the format has been. In a letter to its users, Redmond has conceded that Microsoft Tag will pass the way of all things on August 19th, 2015. That said, if you can’t live without the system, QR Code company Scanbuy will be supporting certain Tag components from September of this year. We’ve included a suitably redacted version of the company’s letter after the break, but be warned — it contains toe-curling phrases like “digitally engage with brands in their everyday surroundings through smartphones.”

[Thanks, Carter]

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Microsoft and Nokia launch Music Mix Party, let friends share a streaming Xbox playlist (video)

Nokia Music Mix Party lets friends share an Xbox music stream

We’ve seen a few attempts at shared audio streaming, but many of these depend on specialized apps or hardware. Microsoft and Nokia could clear that hurdle with their newly launched Nokia Music Mix Party, which leans on what many of us have at home. Xbox 360 owners with an Xbox Live Gold subscription just have to visit a website that starts an artist-based streaming playlist with a custom QR code; after that, anyone in the room with a mobile device can scan the code and vote on which songs should play next. The service is free to use during July, although we don’t yet know if and how pricing will change afterward. Is Mix Party simple? You bet — but it could keep guests happy at future shindigs, even if they don’t care for our tastes in music.

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Source: Nokia Music Mix Party, Exploring IE

Xbox One to let gamers scan download codes using Kinect

Xbox One to let us scan download codes with Kinect, finally

Many console gamers know the drudgery of entering a download code with a gamepad or keyboard. Now that Kinect is part and parcel of the Xbox One experience, however, they’ll always get to skip that step: Microsoft’s Marc Whitten has revealed that system owners can scan the codes with the Kinect camera. While this is really an extension of what the original Kinect can do — Kinectimals takes advantage of QR codes, for example — it should be a big help for gamers who’d rather be playing than typing.

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Source: Marc Whitten (Twitter)

Mercedes-Benz plan will put QR codes on cars to speed up rescues

MercedesBenz wants QR codes on cars to speed up the rescue process

We joke that most people don’t like QR codes, but those codes link to a lot of information through one snapshot — and Mercedes-Benz may just use that efficiency to save lives. The automaker is putting the symbols on vehicles so that emergency crews just need a phone camera scan for easy access to rescue sheets, which are schematics that show where to cut into a wrecked car when recovering trapped passengers. With such immediate knowledge, rescuers don’t have to wait for a model confirmation or else risk cutting wires and fuel lines. While we’ll initially see the QR codes only in Mercedes-Benz cars made this year and beyond (placed inside the fuel door and on the opposite side B-pillar), the company isn’t being selfish: it’s refusing to patent its method in the hope that every vehicle manufacturer will quickly embrace the technology.

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Via: Autoblog

Source: Mercedes-Benz

Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video)

Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything

Technologies like NFC, RFID and QR codes are quickly becoming a normal part of everyday life, and now a group from Carnegie Mellon University has a fresh take on close-quarters data it calls acoustic barcodes. It involves physically etching a barcode-like pattern onto almost any surface, so it produces sound when something’s dragged across it — a fingernail, for example. A computer is then fed that sound through a microphone, recognizes the waveform and executes a command based on it. By altering the space between the grooves, it’s possible to create endless unique identifiers that are associated with different actions.

It’s easy to see how smartphones could take advantage of this — not that we recommend dragging your new iPhone over ridged surfaces — but unlike the technologies mentioned earlier, not all potential applications envisage a personal reading device. Dot barcodes around an area, install the sound processing hardware on site, and you’ve got yourself an interactive space primed for breaking freshly manicured nails. We’re pretty impressed by the simplicity of the concept, and the team does a good job of presenting scenarios for implementing it, which you can see in the video below. And, if you’d like to learn a little more about the idea or delve into the full academic paper, the source links await you.

[Thanks, Julia]

Continue reading Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video)

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Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 13 Oct 2012 00:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hack a Day  |  sourceChris Harrison (1), (2) (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

Target adds QR codes to hot holiday toys for secret shopping

Target adds QR codes to hot holiday toys for secret shopping

Well, this one should give parents with ever-present ankle-biters reason to celebrate. Starting Sunday, October 14th, Target will make a special in-store area available highlighting 20 of the most sought-after toys — all tagged with QR codes for one-stop, secret mobile shopping. The initiative is being targeted at consumers (read: frazzled Moms and Dads) who need to conduct their frenzied gift-buying without the prying eyes of curious children. You’ll have to install the company’s app to scan the codes and opt-in for the free shipping, but it’s really no more complicated than that. All told, it’s an added bit of convenience that should relieve some of that mad holiday stress, but it’s definitely bad news for the impulse buyer. You can check out the PR after the break for the full list of included products.

Continue reading Target adds QR codes to hot holiday toys for secret shopping

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Target adds QR codes to hot holiday toys for secret shopping originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Oct 2012 09:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bank of America testing QR Code scanning mobile payment system in North Carolina

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Mobile payment is still a bit of a wild west at the moment, and seemingly every technological and financial institution has a dog in this fight. Bank of America’s not going to just sit idly by and watch it all unfold. The US’s second largest bank has flirted with NFC in the past and is currently doing trials with QR scanning in Charlotte, North Carolina, where it’s based. At present, five sellers in the area are taking part in the pilot program, with bank employees given access to the technology. The three-month trial is the result of a partnership with mobile payment company Paydiant, is compatible with Android handsets and iPhones, no NFC needed, naturally.

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Bank of America testing QR Code scanning mobile payment system in North Carolina originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 13:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New ‘nano-code’ could help fight banknote forgery by embedding invisible QR-style ciphers

New 'nano-code' could help fight banknote forgery by embedding invisible QR-style ciphers

We’ve all seen (and probably used) QR codes at some point. And, handy as they are for quick linking to apps, or value added content etc, there’s usually not much else going on. Unless you’re one of the team at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, that is, who have created a tiny version of the quadrilateral-codes that could be used to spot counterfeit money. The invention uses nanoparticles combined with blue and green fluorescent ink, and can be sprayed onto surfaces such as glass, plastic film, or of course, pictures of American presidents. The nano-code remains invisible until placed under a near-infrared laser, making it ideal for helping spot legit bank notes. The creators say they have done significant wear tests, which suggest that it’s durable, but they also accept that eventually criminal technology could eventually catch up, in the constant cat and mouse game between mandated money producers and forgers. Whether there’d be links to the Benjamin Franklin Wiki page is unclear.

Continue reading New ‘nano-code’ could help fight banknote forgery by embedding invisible QR-style ciphers

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New ‘nano-code’ could help fight banknote forgery by embedding invisible QR-style ciphers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Sep 2012 00:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Visualized: World’s largest QR code is a Canadian maize maze

Visualized World's largest QR code is a Canadian maize maze

And why wouldn’t it be? That’s how the Kraay family of Lacombe, Alberta, Canada gets down, as evidenced by the family’s past 13 years of elaborate corn maze designs — from a logo of the Edmonton Oilers to a 25th anniversary commemoration of Rick Hansen’s “Man in Motion” tour. Said QR code sends adventurous scanners to a website for the Kraay’s family farm website. The code also got the Kraays into the Guinness Book of World Records for “World’s Largest QR Code,” which was really what drove this whole project. At approximately 29,000 meters (1.1 square miles), that’s quite a bit of carefully crafted corn designing. It’s certainly more elaborate than the previously claimed record holder, and a lot more official.

“It was something that we didn’t think would happen. There were a lot of little things we had to do and Guinness is pretty picky with how you collect your evidence. We were a little bit on edge on whether it would come through so we were very relieved and very excited,” Rachel Kraay told CTV News about the project. To verify that the code works, the Kraays had to commission a helicopter to fly them over their own farm, allowing them to scan it while hovering hundreds of feet above. And then, at the end of last week, the Guinness folks sent over a package certifying the bizarre world record. “They didn’t even call. I just went to the door and there was a large package and inside was the certificate and a letter. I guess that’s how they do it.”

[Image credit: Facebook]

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Visualized: World’s largest QR code is a Canadian maize maze originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Sep 2012 07:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Digital Journal  |  sourceCTV News  | Email this | Comments