I've been writing about NFC and QR codes for over a decade.
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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!
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@Edent I don't think I've used NFC at all this year except for paying for things!
@Edent Except I think locally library books contain an NFC tag which is scanned by the check-in/out machine in the library - not with a device belonging to the user.
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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 avoid both as much as possible
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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 think I've only used NFC for tap-to-pay on my phone. However if you include "not a phone", then my kids are the heaviest NFC users in the house.
They have a "Toniebox": a wifi-connected speaker with an NFC reader at the top. It reads the NFC chips in little plastic figurines and plays the audiobook, story or music that the figurines represent. It's a nice (if pricey) frontend to the audio store essentially, you pay for each figurine. The kids love it though. -
@Edent I am the opposite - I have never used NFC on any of my phones!
The only time I use QR codes are when I have to authorise access for something, e.g. logging into some websites.
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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 very often use QR to share links or text with people in the same room with me it's very handy because they just have to open their camera app. It's very good with older or non techi people
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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've never used nfc on my phone for any reason.
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