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MobileWhack pointed out Semacode, a system for encoding URLs into two-dimensional bar codes. The idea behind it is that camera phone users who are looking for detailed information about an item at hand can take a picture of a semacode bar code and automatically have their mobile phone's browser bring up a corresponding web page.
In the MobileWhack article on Semacode, Rael Dornefest said:
Semacode is about as cool an app as I've come across and a confirmation of my ongoing belief that the handset is so much more than a telephone... and is better thought of as an interface between the online and offline worlds right in your back pocket.
Create semacodes (not entirely unlike homebrew UPC symbols) for your gallery exhibits, campus bus stops, laptop, home-brewed beer labels, etc. Print them out and slap them on.
So what makes Semacode different from Cue Cat, the last mass market bar code scanning implementation that was attempted?
Currently, the Semacode reader application works on Nokia Series 60 phones, including the
Nokia 6600, the Nokia 3650, and the Nokia 7650. Ports for other Symbian-based handsets with cameras are said to be under development. I imagine that other platforms will be supported relatively soon.
I've looked at the applications that the Semacode developers suggested. All of them are useful, but none of them strike me as significant enough to get millions of Americans to start using them. If they find an application that is really hot, Semacode technology would drive a mobile phone upgrade cycle so that camera-less mobile phone users would move up to camera phones.
Posted by Dave Aiello in Mobile Phones on May 5, 2004 08:24 PMNever heard about it! Tell me more please
Posted by: Searchman at June 10, 2004 10:51 AMwho makes the software??
Posted by: paul at July 18, 2004 11:51 AMI never heard about it too.
That may be interest! Mobile web rulezz! :)