Graphical links, 2D Barcodes and Microsoft Tag

With CES happening last week there’s been plenty of new technology to play with – not least a full beta or Windows 7.  One thing that caught my eye though was Microsoft Tag.

Tag for this site

The idea of encoding data in a graphical form has been around for years, in its most basic form the simple barcode.  Normal barcodes can’t contain much data though, so aren’t that useful in the internet world.  2D barcodes however can contain quite a bit – certainly enough to contain a URL.

Traditional 2D barcodes like QR Codes do just that, provide a way of encoding a URL.  The idea being that you point a camera phone or webcam at the QR code and some client software sends the the URL to a browser to open.

3-codes

There are a few things that make the solution from MS a little different.  For one thing the codes are a different format, they’re smaller and use coloured triangles rather than mono-chrome blocks.  This technology High Capacity Color Barcodes (HCCBs) allows they tags to be much smaller.

The other big difference is that the codes don’t contain a URL, but instead contain a reference.  The client software decodes the reference than polls a backend service for the details of the code, whether that be a URL, a vCard for contact information, free text or interestingly a phone number that a phone client can dial.

TagPhoneNumber

One of the benefits of using a reference and backend service is that you can easily perform some analytics on your tags and their use.  The MS Tag generator site does just that with a range of reports available.

So what could you use tags for?  When there are a few obvious uses such as adverts and posters – snapping a picture of the tag on a movie poster might take you to local cinema times (you can opt to send location data with tags).

So far there are clients for Windows Mobile, J2EE, iPhone, Blackberry and Symbian S60 phones.  The tag generator is web based using Silverlight and as you might have spotted from my screenshot work on a Mac too.  You can get the client here: http://gettag.mobi/ or from the iStore on iPhone.

Back to work…

Despite my best efforts to catch the flu, it’s looking like Monday morning will bring with it my first working week of 2009 (booooo!).  It’s  set to be a busy start of the year, with quite a lot of projects and work carrying over from December.  As well as the big Enterprise Architecture project I’ve been working on there are a host of smaller things that will be taking up my time.

I’ll be following up with Apple and O2 on the iPhone Exchange ActiveSync issues we’ve been seeing.  Hopefully now we have some repeatable scenarios we can provide to Apple we’ll be able to help fix the issues.

There’s some ongoing work to streamline our supply chain for desktop (and laptop) computers.  This has been hanging around for months and although nothing is actually ‘broken’ there’s a general feeling that we can do even better.  We should be able to work with our suppliers to cut some slack from the supply process and with any luck cut some costs at the same time.  In truth this isn’t strictly my job anymore, but as it’s what I used to look after I’m giving the guys a helping hand.  Plus it should put us in really good stead for the Desktop/Windows 7 work we have pencilled in over the next year.

By far the most varied – and time consuming – chunk of work is the ongoing programme of work my team has put together for the remainder of the 2008 FY and 2009.  Ensuring the these projects make a successful transition from our drawing board into actual working projects is incredibly important.  Our project guys are all pretty good, but there’s a lot of projects to keep track of.  One thing we need to do better is to both better publicise – and ‘market’ -  the roadmap of work coming up (and it’s implications/benefits) and also ensure the we have a clearer view of the status of the programme and it’s component projects.  Again nothing is broken as such, but I’m a stickler for the details and making things better! :)  Fortunately some of this ties in nicely with the Enterprise Architecture so I should be able to bring it all together into something more consistent.

Hopefully I’ll be able to get my hands dirty in a few more technical projects this year as well.  Whilst I enjoy the higher level architecture work, I do miss the more immediate satisfaction of getting a script to run or seeing your freshly installed system work for the first time.  I won’t get too much time for this, but if I pick the right projects I’ll be able to get stuck in.  We’re doing some good work on the development side with Agile working, it’d be great to try and translate some of this into the more infrastructure related projects that are my background.

So a busy January awaits… It’s good fun work, but I’m still not looking forward to the alarm clock going off at 6am on Monday!

The Fox Goes Free

Photo from Deano T on Flickr

If you’re ever anywhere near Goodwood here in the UK you could do a lot worse that stopping off at The Fox Goes Free, a pub in a village called Charlton.

There are a few good places to eat in Chichester and Arundel, but I reckon the Fox Goes Free is my favorite.  Today we went there for lunch with a few friends and once again had a great time.  I’ve been there a lot over the past few years and the food has always been fantastic, it’s one of those places that you’d never hesitate to recommend to anyone – so that’s what I thought I would do!

(Photo from Deano T on Flickr)

Got a Mac? What to try Photosynth?

Good news!  Following on from the weekends release of an iPhone application for SeaDragon MS has released an experimental silverlight viewer for Photosynth.  So if you have a Mac, just install the Silverlight plugin and try it here.

Silverlight Photosynth viewer

It doesn’t seem to have all of the functionality of the full client, and clearly won’t benefit from DirectX acceleration but it does a pretty good job I reckon.   I’ve been trying it on work’s Macbook and it’s nice and speedy.  Try it out and see what you think.

Seadragon makes it to iPhone

iPhone Seadragon view on a Photosynth setiPhone Seadragon zoom into a Photosynth setiPhone Seadragon zoom into a Photosynth set

I’m probably a bit late with this news but I noticed at the weekend that Microsoft have released an iPhone application for their Seadragon technology.

I’ve posted about Seadragon and it’s partner in crime Photosynth quite a lot in the past so I won’t go into detail about the technology itself (try here and here for that), but the iPhone application does go some way to showing the potential Seadragon has.

At the moment the app is able to access content from the Photosynth site, any Seadragon RSS feed (though I’m yet to work out what these are…) and any DeepZoom composer files.  It also comes with access to some example content such as maps – which interestingly also use the iPhones location awareness to show your position on them.

Whilst the app does a good job, I’d hope and suspect that it’s very much our first view of things to come.  At the moment for example although the app can open images from PhotoSynth ‘synths’, it doesn’t present them in their full 3D glory.  Hopefully in future this functionality will be added as it would seem to suit the Smartphone/iPhone form factor and interface perfectly.

I’m also interested to see what the Seadragon RSS feeds are.  I’ve not had a good look into it yet, but I can’t see anything about them on Seadragon.com.  I’d imaging they are similar to the RSS feeds you can import into PhotoZoom.  Hopefully I’ll be able to point it into my flickr account and it’ll Seadragon up my pictures!