The mobile app is going the way of the CD-ROM: To the dustbin of history | VentureBeat
QR codes make it easy for buyers to see the inside of the home from their smartphone | wtsp.com
"A person standing at the curb can go through the photos and decide whether this is a home they'd like to see," says Nowicke.
- She's one of 30 realtors in the Bay area using QR codes. She says the new technology is the perfect trend for the real estate industry.
Adobe is killing off Flash for mobile web browsers - The Inquirer
- The company will instead focus on HTML5 development, which enables web browsers including those on mobile phones to perform essentially the same task as flash but without relying Adobe's proprietary technologies.
- Some 5 percent of Americans — and 15 percent of smartphone owners — have scanned such a code in the last three months, according to new figures due to be released on Monday by Forrester. A year ago, only 1 percent of Americans had been willing or able to do so.
- codes provide an efficient and cheap means to link the online and offline worlds.
- Digimarc, are pushing methods for embedding the codes into the page so that they don’t disturb the visual layout. The challenge, though, is that it is harder for readers to know that there is more content available.
- ScanLife, which tracks such codes, says the number of active users in its system has increased 300 percent from a year ago.
Posted from Diigo. The rest of MobileWeb2Go group favorite links are here.
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