Doctor Setebos
10-07-2008, 04:12 PM
According to Siliconera (http://www.siliconera.com/2008/10/07/nintendos-dsi-camera-used-for-scanning-trading-cards/) (by way of Tiny Cartridge (http://tinycartridge.com/post/53481271/dsis-potential-as-a-qr-code-scanner)) we learn that Nintendo has registered a trademark in Japan for 'DSScan' under the category of 'game equipment'. Eric at Tiny Cartridge talks about the prevalence and usefulness of QR barcodes in Japan.
For those of you unfamiliar with the pixelated “Quick Response” patches, it’s a popular barcode system in Japan often attached to commercial products and other objects.
People scan the small squares with their mobile phone cameras and are able to access encoded data — nutritional information for food, directions from Google Maps, contact details on a business card, or even the developer’s site from a Nintendo DS game box.He goes on to expound luminously on the implications of such technology being linked to a device that everyone on Earth will potentially own (given that the DSi becomes as popular as the DS has). Could we exchange friend codes using nothing more than a scan of an image? Engage in a real-world scavenger hunt? The possibilities are endless, but only if there proves to actually be technology behind the ambiguous name.
For those of you unfamiliar with the pixelated “Quick Response” patches, it’s a popular barcode system in Japan often attached to commercial products and other objects.
People scan the small squares with their mobile phone cameras and are able to access encoded data — nutritional information for food, directions from Google Maps, contact details on a business card, or even the developer’s site from a Nintendo DS game box.He goes on to expound luminously on the implications of such technology being linked to a device that everyone on Earth will potentially own (given that the DSi becomes as popular as the DS has). Could we exchange friend codes using nothing more than a scan of an image? Engage in a real-world scavenger hunt? The possibilities are endless, but only if there proves to actually be technology behind the ambiguous name.