I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade.
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@Edent I've got a bunch of NFC tags around the house, they're connected to Home Assistant to do things like turn on/off my desk/washing machine, trigger automations like bedtime light sequence (turn off one immediately then another later), reset the cat feeder counter etc.
I also have NFC tags on my 3d printing filament so the printer knows what colour and type are installed (using https://github.com/DnG-Crafts/ACE-RFID)
@Edent@mastodon.social @M0YNG@mastodon.radio
There's an app to top-up my public transport card via NFC - https://leapcard.ie/ - the entire country uses it I presume…
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent I’m fairly biased because I am an NFC app developer. I see the problem with NFC tags as well and yes in the wild you see far more QR codes. Since Covid everyone knows them and how to use them. NFC is hidden. The coolest use case is still the business card with an NFC chip. It just gives another layer of interaction. QR codes in general look ugly and are not nice when you want a good looking design.
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@Edent probably NFC slightly more, as my gym uses an NFC reader to open the entry gate
@deadliftbear @Edent the question is if I read it correctly about nfc with your phone, so are you entering with your phone?
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@Edent Oh hang on, I forgot the access cards for work which I suppose are NFC.
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@Edent I’m fairly biased because I am an NFC app developer. I see the problem with NFC tags as well and yes in the wild you see far more QR codes. Since Covid everyone knows them and how to use them. NFC is hidden. The coolest use case is still the business card with an NFC chip. It just gives another layer of interaction. QR codes in general look ugly and are not nice when you want a good looking design.
@Edent lately I’m working on a Pokemon like collecting game with NFC tags which you couldn’t do with QR codes. I saw something similar on a congress and I thought that is cool and I want to amplify the concept. It basically is 38x38 pixel art designs that can be shared. Making the game that works and is fun is actually the hard part: https://mastodon.social/@nico42/115965004795991678
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@Edent I’m fairly biased because I am an NFC app developer. I see the problem with NFC tags as well and yes in the wild you see far more QR codes. Since Covid everyone knows them and how to use them. NFC is hidden. The coolest use case is still the business card with an NFC chip. It just gives another layer of interaction. QR codes in general look ugly and are not nice when you want a good looking design.
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@deadliftbear @Edent the question is if I read it correctly about nfc with your phone, so are you entering with your phone?
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@deadliftbear @Edent but that’s probably not nfc either Bluetooth or Internet
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@spacehobo @Edent Works with that too (I use it weekly), but the curious thing is that the NFC chip on the Fairphone 5 is in the middle of the device, and not at the top, which is a little surprising and confusing.
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@deadliftbear @Edent but that’s probably not nfc either Bluetooth or Internet
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent I rarely use QR codes. I don't use NFC for tap payment when I am charging my car out and about.
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent I wonder if you can make a recognisable QR code with smoke signals, even for a split-second. Sorry this isn't arguing per se, I could make it more contentio–
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent@mastodon.social Scanning a QR code with QRIS is more accessible than NFC since most low-end phones in Indonesia still don't have NFC as far as I can tell. Most banking and e-wallet apps are supporting it also, makes it become the norm in the past years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QRIS -
@Edent I wonder if you can make a recognisable QR code with smoke signals, even for a split-second. Sorry this isn't arguing per se, I could make it more contentio–
@rgarner You could fire lasers into a smoke haze, that'd probably work?
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent NFC for tap-to-pay lately more than I use my credit card. Occasionally use it for tickets (sporting events, concerts). QR codes are way more common for everything else. I can't think of anything I've used NFC for besides paying and entrance tickets
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent@mastodon.social I mostly use NFC regularly to top-up my e-money card (Similar to London's Oyster card) because the bus service that I take gives 60% discounted fare for students if I use a card that I then register to the relevant office. -
@Edent@mastodon.social Scanning a QR code with QRIS is more accessible than NFC since most low-end phones in Indonesia still don't have NFC as far as I can tell. Most banking and e-wallet apps are supporting it also, makes it become the norm in the past years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QRIS -
I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent I almost never use NFC intentionally.
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I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade. So I have a question for you.
Since the start of 2026, which have you done more - scanned a QR code or used NFC on your phone (excluding tap-to-pay)?
If you regularly use NFC, please reply and tell me what you use it for. Thanks!
The Problem With RFID
RFID is like cold fusion. It will revolutionise everything - and it's only five years away! Terence Eden And, much like cold fusion, NFC will permantently be just around the corner. It's been "The Year of NFC" since 2008. Just like it was in 2009 and in 2010. Today the news came that Google may be abandoning QR codes in favour of NFC for its business places service. I think this is a mistake …
Terence Eden’s Blog (shkspr.mobi)
@Edent I don't think I've used NFC at all this year except for paying for things!