How prevalent are QR (Quick Response) Codes in the US in 2010? Will QR codes replace barcodes totally?
Bar codes growing smarter, more useful
Monday, June 21, 2010 Last updated: Monday June 21, 2010, 8:16 AM
BY RACHEL METZ
The Record
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — It used to be that the only time you'd notice a bar code was at a store, maybe when a cashier scanned your groceries. But lately bar codes are showing up in more places — and getting more sophisticated.
You might have seen one cousin of the traditional bar code: Known as a QR code, this jumble of little squares randomly arranged within a larger square is popping up on everything from bus stop billboards to restaurant windows. If you spot one and snap it with your cellphone camera, the device can show you a website, photo or video related to the advertiser.
Fast facts
WHAT’S HAPPENING: Variations on bar codes, once used just to track inventory at stores, are showing up with a different look and more functions.
BEYOND THE BAR: One cousin of the traditional bar code, the QR code, looks like a bunch of small squares inside a larger square. Google uses these on decals it sends to businesses.
HOW IT WORKS: Consumers read the code with a cellphone camera and scanning application, and are directed to a Web page or other online content. The codes on Google’s stickers link to a mobile version of a page where businesses can post coupons.
For example, Google Inc. is giving businesses stickers with QR codes that passers-by can scan. That brings up a link to a mobile version of a Google page where the business can post coupons and information about themselves. Soon the codes could lead to other avenues for connecting with customers in ways businesses can measure and control. That could help them target advertisements to the people who are most likely to respond to their entreaties.
Earlier attempts to get consumers to scan bar codes that link with the Web didn't get much traction. The 1990s brought the CueCat, which let publishers append their printed material with bar codes that people could scan with a handheld reader if they wanted to be taken directly to related information on their computers. The QR code (short for "quick response") also was released in the 1990s by
Japanese scanning equipment maker Denso Wave Inc.
What has changed now, though, is that consumers are increasingly engaging with their mobile devices for more than making phone calls, texting and checking e-mails. And smart phones can easily download scanning applications that make it possible for product codes to leap from store shelves to the wider world.
The bar code on your box of cookies encodes a string of numbers horizontally that a bar code reader matches with information from a central database. That's how the supermarket scanner identifies the product you're buying.
These other codes, such as QR codes, can represent data horizontally and vertically. That means they can include much more information in a smaller space, and some of them can tell the scanning app on your phone all it needs to know about which website or video to pull up, without needing to consult a database. It's unclear how many of these codes are out there, but potentially billions could be created.
Google has been using QR codes since late last year to help promote hundreds of thousands of businesses in its local listings service, known as Google Places. The company has sent the businesses decals for their windows that say, "We're a Favorite place on Google" and include a QR code at the bottom.
The idea stemmed from Google's desire to have more of a physical presence with businesses and consumers, says Ryan Hayward, a product marketing manager for Google Maps who is heading the rollout of QR code stickers.
For now, the codes lead to the mobile version of a business' page on Google Places. Eventually, Google might use the technology to pull up videos and lead to application downloads, Hayward says.
I actually LOVE this new technology. I actually just finished a design utilizing a barcode. These are extremely exciting times for the communicators of the world! No longer is a print ad just a static message. We can interact in ways we couldn't before. Now with a snap of a smart phone I get to direct my audience to a commercial, additional information, or even capture that lead with a micro site!
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