You may not know what a  QR code is exactly, but you’ve probably seen one on a poster, magazine ad, or some other printed material over the past few years. Cellphone users can simply take a picture of the black and white code, have it decoded by an application, and get redirected to a website that offers more information about whatever the code was attached to. For example, Google recently adopted QR codes as a way for customers to get more information about an establishment by linking them to the venue’s Google Places page.

With Microsoft Tag, the technology giant is attempting to jump into this space with their own proprietary bar code technology. MS brings some bonuses to their variant, including: Intricate color designs for the tags (compared to the QR code’s blocky black and white design), the ability to hold more data, and increased analytics (a boon for advertisers). Microsoft Research has been working on the underlying technology, dubbed High Capacity Color Barcode (HCCB), since 2007.

Tags are decoded via Microsoft’s software. While it would be nice to see MS opening up the standard for other bar code reader applications (like QuickMark) to join in, at least they were wise enough to offer a version for pretty much every phone platform — including iPhone, Android, Palm OS, Blackberry, and J2ME (Java) phones.

They’ve been popping up in magazines for the past year, but now Microsoft is allowing anyone to make their own Tags via its official website. There’s a definite need for some sort of perfect solution in this space — something that will connect offline media to the web — and the door is wide open for someone to dominate. Helping MS is the fact that QR codes haven’t become nearly as prevalent in the US as they have in Japan and a few other countries.

Another competing standard in this space is  Data Matrix, which was adopted by the US Department of Defense. At this point, most QR code reading software also supports Data Matrix.

It remains to be seen what exactly Microsoft will do with Tag. For now, it seems that they just want to make us aware that it exists, and that it’s much prettier than the competition. Given its stylistic advantages over uglier QR codes, the promise of better analytics for advertisers, and the fact that Tags can remain legible to reader software while remaining physically smaller than QR codes, it’s very likely that Tags will soon be everywhere.

Tag was demonstrated at the last DEMO conference (which VentureBeat co-produces) in Fall 2009.

source:http://venturebeat.com/2010/02/01/microsoft-takes-on-bar-codes-with-tag-links-the-web-to-the-real-world/

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다음 커뮤니케이션의 글로벌 센터장님의
Japan Mobile Trends 특강을 듣고, 생각을 정리했다.

일본 모바일 시장의 특징: 

·         세계 최고의 모바일 3G네트웍, GPS, 바코드 인식(QR-코드) 등 기술적인 관점에서 일본 모바일 과 한국의 모바일 시장은 차이가 없는 것 같으나, 개인주의와 국수주의, 매니아 문화가 발달해서 일까 다른 나라에서는 찾아 볼 수 없는 압도적인 모바일 페이지뷰와 세계 최대의 모바일 시장을 이라고 한다.

·         물론, 모바일 시장이 팽창하는 데는 합리적인 데이터 요금제와 플랫폼 개방이 한 몫을 톡톡히 한 것 같으나 아이러니 한 것은 오픈 플랫폼이지만 그들만의 오픈이 아닌가?

·         애플 i-phone예로, 시장 이해 없는 훌륭한 제품도 성공을 장담할 수 없는 사실도 알 수 있었다.

QR 코드: A QR Code is a matrix code (or two-dimensional bar code) created by Japanese corporation Denso-Wave in 1994. The "QR" is derived from "Quick Response", as the creator intended the code to allow its contents to be decoded at high speed.


한국 모바일 시장의 변화는?

·         위피 폐지와 세계적인 모바일 오픈 플랫폼 등장, 강력한 모바일 CPU  다양한 모바일 디바이스, 사용자의  높은 욕구와 기존 인터넷 환경 에서 경험 등을  생각해보면, 일본과 비슷한 모바일 이용형태는 보여지지 않을 것 같고, 인터넷 접속환경이 모바일 디바이스로 옮겨 가지 않을 까 생각한다.

·         합리적인 데이터 요금 체계와 이통사가 원하는 방향이 아닌  제조사, 소비자, 이통사가 윈윈하는 모바일 환경을 기대한다

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