hauntedcastle.org

Oct 21

QR Codes: The Utility Problem

I read 2 QR code articles today.  This one is probably the most entertaining.  It essentially argues that nobody knows what QR codes are (still), and that even when they do, they are too obnoxious to use to make them useful.

As a one time QR proponent (larger for my own non marketing related ideas), My feeling is not that QR Codes are fundamentally flawed, but that they have been taken over by marketers in a way that makes the fundamental value proposition of this technology pretty… *shrug.*

At one point, QR Codes were a way for designers of some sort to come up with interesting experiences.  Area/code did a lot of this, as did a number of folks in Japan and Europe.  QR Codes allowed designers to pretty quickly take designs out into the real world, and were an easier, cheaper, and more accessible way of doing location stuff in the pre-iPhone era.  Even some early attempts at marketing with QR codes were essentially experience design.  There was novelty, but also at least some sense of this being something interesting.  QR codes have been used in awesome ways, mainly through the sense of mystery about what lay on the other side of this physical / virtual divide.

But then location technologies became better, and experience designers started abandoning QR Codes for GPS, etc.  Foursquare is a classic example of this — instead of taking a picture of a QR Code to check in somewhere, it’s a lot easier and more fun to have the GPS scan for nearby places.

As a result, QR Codes became more of a utility, and marketers treated it as such.  Scan this QR Code to download a vCard, or visit the web page of a band you see on a flyer.  Now that QR Codes are a utility, their flaws as a utility become very clear.  It’s way easier to look up things on your phone’s web browser, for instance, instead of going through this awkward dance of opening your QR code reader app, waiting for the (still slow) camera to load, taking the picture, processing the image, and then rendering whatever content the marketers what you to see.

That brings up the 2nd issue — lack of agency.  You are taken wherever the fuck the marketer wants you.  As this techcrunch piece notes out, there could be an increasing chance you’ll get taken somewhere a tad sketchy.

Clearly, none of this is the technology’s fault, but rather the result of a shift in who is designing QR experiences and who these experiences are designed for.

(To be fair, I would argue that NFC will run into a lot of the same problems)

Kill Screen: British TV confuses game footage with real life -

killscreendaily:

File this one under “British People!”

Anyways, the makers of a recent documentary on the Northern Ireland conflict confused videogame footage for actual war footage, and slipped it into an ITV (the British TV channel that isn’t the BBC) documentary. The game comes from Arma 2, an…

(via slavin)

awesome graphic. I wish we had more of these as prints.

awesome graphic. I wish we had more of these as prints.

Oct 20

(via GamOvr - Pix for game geeks)

(via GamOvr - Pix for game geeks)

“Someone feeling wronged is like someone feeling thirsty. Don’t tell them they aren’t. Sit with them and have a drink.” — by Lemony Snicket | OccupyWriters.com

Sep 26

“Does all of this new structure make my experience more engaging? Or does the added structure make my experience easier to index? Does the connection to my past posts inspire me to add more chapters of my life’s story? Or does it remind me of how much of my personal information Facebook owns to make me rethink leaving for other service? Is Facebook really interested in helping me tell the story of my own life? Or are they more interested in having me help them tell the story of my life to their app developers, partners and advertisers?” — @bryce

nodesnoop:

The Jaguarr is a service that allows people to send songs to their friends in a phone call.  Just SMS The Jaguarr a number and a song, and it will call out to your friend with that song.  Fun!  The Jaguarr also allows you to attach songs to foursquare places.  Text #4sq to The Jaguarr to try it out.  http://jaguarr.me.

nodesnoop:

The Jaguarr is a service that allows people to send songs to their friends in a phone call.  Just SMS The Jaguarr a number and a song, and it will call out to your friend with that song.  Fun!  The Jaguarr also allows you to attach songs to foursquare places.  Text #4sq to The Jaguarr to try it out.  http://jaguarr.me.

[video]

“In prison, every time we complained about our conditions, the guards would immediately remind us of comparable conditions at Guantanamo Bay.” — Shane Bauer, one of the two American hikers released last week after 781 days of detention in Iranian prison. (via seaofgreen)

(via gregcohn)

Sep 20

“But the current coffee zeitgeist revolves around public consumption. You head out to buy a latte, and the quality of the coffee made in your pajamas has not necessarily risen in tandem with the cult of the barista. Tonx aims to change that.” — Tasting Table LA