MIT’s Bokode tech calls out zebra stripes, QR codes for battle of barcode supremacy
Posted in: augmented reality, AugmentedReality, mit, Today's ChiliSince barcodes are the sign of the devil (must be true, we read it on the interwebs) it’s no surprise that everyone wants to replace ’em. QR codes have been quite popular, allowing people and companies to tag their stuff with colorful decals filled with bits and bytes, and of course RFID tags are still going strong, but a team of researchers at MIT has come up with something better: Bokode. It’s effectively a tiny little retroreflective holograph that is just 3mm wide but, when a camera focused to infinity sweeps across it, the Bokodes become clear and appear much larger, captured in the video below. In this way they can contain “thousands of bits” of data and, interestingly, show positional information too, meaning the camera knows where in 3D space it is in relation to the tag. This, of course, has hundreds of potential applications ranging from grocery shopping to augmented reality, and should lead to new and exciting ways for scholars to interpret/misinterpret Revelations.
[Via BBC]
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Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
MIT’s Bokode tech calls out zebra stripes, QR codes for battle of barcode supremacy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 09:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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