QR Codes: like barcodes, just better

Quick Response Code
A Quick Response Code

QR Codes, los sis Quick Response Codes, are all the rage nowadays. You know, those black-and-white barcode-looking thingies that show up on magazines, posters, and even some t-shirts.

A QR Code is actually fairly similar to a barcode: it’s an image that encodes data zoo li URLs, phone numbers, words, and more. You can even take a picture and sort of turn it into a QR code (the picture is uploaded to the internet and the QR code encodes the URL of the picture.) Sure you lose some aesthetic value, but hey.

Tsis tau txaus noog npau taws? Ua kom hauv internet

Playing Angry Birds 1-1
Ib tug noog crashing mus ua ib tug qauv, uas npua nyob rau hauv tus txheej txheem

Yog hais tias koj lub xov tooj lub roj teeb yuav tuag rau koj vim koj siv tag nrho koj lub sij hawm ua si qhov nrov wildly mobile kev ua si Noog npau taws (los yog hais tias koj pheej yig heev yuav npau taws noog), koj yuav tsum tau zoo nkauj tus pog txog qhov project.

Koj tau tam sim no ua si noog npau taws hauv internet no. Ntawm no yog koj xav tau dab tsi:

  1. Ib tug dlej browser (ntxiv rau ntawd tom qab)
  2. Eeb tsev av (thov txim, cov neeg iDevice)

Raws li qhov URL (chrome.angrybirds.com) tej zaum hint, Noog npau taws tej hauj lwm nyob rau ntawm Chrome. Kuv twb sim nws rau ob peb browsers thiab ntawm no yog kuv twb pom dab tsi: