Business Cards Are Now Involved In Quick Response Codes
Soon, a card with just your name and phone number that could be a dinosaur.
A company in Virginia, has a digital business.
Earlier this month, more than 50 companies under Odin Feldman Pittleman have the option of adding a Quick Response bar code, which can transmit information through barcode readers and camera phones.
You've probably started seeing these barcode "QR Codes" in magazines, ready to be scanned and used. Now, lawyers are beginning to use any network.
Technology and e-commerce lawyer Jonathan D. Frieden got the idea for a friend who works in real estate development activities, the Washington Post. Frieden acknowledged QR Code, as the same thing he had seen the end of the newspaper articles printed where you give the reader quickly pull up the same thing with your mobile device.
Frieden realized how useful - and easily - it would be to use the codes in practice after the addition of a sticker on the back of his business cards. Now, the opportunity will be offered throughout the company.
"The only additional cost is now there is the cost of printing on both sides," Frieden told the Post.
QR codes (you can keep hearing about these code) allows a painless way to move the names, addresses and other information printed on smartphones. Although common in Europe and Asia, the practice has recently made waves in the U.S., the Post said.
It is very probable that a card with QR codes will soon be as current as one without an e-mail.











Post a Comment