Hmmm...

Thanks, that's probably the most useful feedback I've received so far,
it tells me that I need to do a serious rewrite of my readme file.

Tom.

On Apr 13, 12:35 am, YA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sorry Tom. This is beyond my comprehension.
>
> YA
>
> On Apr 13, 2:57 am, tomgibara <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > You would just use an regular EAN barcode for that!
>
> > Here are a few examples among many:
>
> >   * Adverts in which the product pops out in 3D, you can look around
> > the product by wandering around the advert and looking at it through
> > your phone. It might be interactive, allowing you change styles/
> > colours etc.
>
> >   * Keyboard free authentication: a website can display a moseycode
> > barcode, view it with your mobile phone and the site can log you in
> > without you touching your keyboad. It can do this because the your
> > phone can contact a designated server for each different barcode. The
> > viewing might even be 'location locked' so that with GPS, even if
> > someone stole your phone, they would still need to view the barcode
> > near to your machine to authenticate themselves.
>
> >   * Imagine games played on a table where all the 'pieces' are
> > represented by barcodes on squares of paper. Looking at them though
> > your mobile phone you can see the 'virtual' pieces, perhaps in full
> > animated 3D. The interesting part is group games: you all get round
> > the table and play, with each player looking at the play area through
> > their own phone. They all see the game in 3D from their perspective
> > through their own phone. The interesting part is that the game could
> > be written to show different players different things. Eg. players on
> > the same team might be able to see more information about each others
> > pieces, it might be used simulate fog of war etc. (I'm very interested
> > in this idea and may take some time to tackle designing and writing
> > such a game when I have more time, I think it might be possible to
> > come up with a genuinely original game concept, a rare thing IMO).
>
> > Hopefully people might find some of these ideas stimulating.
>
> > On Apr 12, 8:15 pm, YA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Alex:
>
> > > AFAIU this is for shopping. You see an item on the shelf, scan it, and
> > > the phone tells you if this is a good buy or not.
>
> > > YA
>
> > > On Apr 12, 8:50 pm, Alex Pisarev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > Can someone tell me what's all that for? Any scenarios or use cases of
> > > > that app to use? It looks cool, however, I always thought that URL is
> > > > the most universal barcode in the world... And you don't have even to
> > > > scan it, just type in your browser and get into any augmented reality
> > > > you want...
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