ksapp82
quality posts: 7
Private Messages
I don't get it, is it suppose to be the smartphone thingy and a composition notebook?
woot.com = 11 woots
shirt.woot = 31 woots
sellout.woot = 3 woots
kids.woot = 4 woots
home.woot = 2 woot
Shirt Trades/Sold = 7/9
ksapp82
quality posts: 7
Private Messages
It would have been cool if it scan back to shirt.woot.com.
woot.com = 11 woots
shirt.woot = 31 woots
sellout.woot = 3 woots
kids.woot = 4 woots
home.woot = 2 woot
Shirt Trades/Sold = 7/9
Assassin15
quality posts: 161
Private Messages
You should get a permanent marker and fill in your name, school, etc., so everyone can have a customized shirt!
PULL UP YOUR SKIRT, WE'RE ON A MISSION/
WE NEED A HERO, NOT A POLITICIAN - "Panhammer" by Phinehas
equazcion
quality posts: 65
Private Messages
A true geek wouldn't have even tried scanning it. QR codes need to be perfect squares; this is a rectangle. It's plain to see it wouldn't work.
Have you been eating that sandwich again?
5of0
quality posts: 3
Private Messages
equazcion wrote:A true geek wouldn't have even tried scanning it. QR codes need to be perfect squares; this is a rectangle. It's plain to see it wouldn't work.
I beg to differ:
Stick that in your QR scanner and decode it. A true geek would know that QR codes are built to be very error-resistant, so they can be pretty distorted/obscured and work just fine.
Now, I looked at it and noticed the lack of the fourth reference point in the lower-right and was sad - that, unlike non-squareness, is a dead giveaway - but tried scanning it anyway out of desperation and disappointment, because really, why would someone do this and *not* make it a real QR code? Sigh.
<creative signature here>
5of0
quality posts: 3
Private Messages
JadenKale wrote:Now, this is how this concept could have been taken that much further, making this tee EPIC instead of a FAIL:
It would have totally sold it for me had the QR code taken you to a story about an old, lonely composition notebook, once loved and written in by a child with a vivid imagination, only to have the child grow old and that book end up in storage for years... Then a young child finds it upstairs in the grandparent's attic, with a story left unfinished, and the child picks up where the grandmother/father left off...
The QR code could have linked to a video on youtube, or woot could have hosted it themselves. A "Storytelling Tee" would have made me buy a bunch.
See, as noted above, this would have been very possible, and I definitely would have bought the shirt had this been the case. But no...it's just a disappointment. Ah well.
<creative signature here>
equazcion
quality posts: 65
Private Messages
5of0 wrote:I beg to differ:
Stick that in your QR scanner and smoke it. A true geek would know that QR codes are built to be very error-resistant, so they can be pretty distorted/obscured and work just fine.
Now, I looked at it and noticed the lack of the fourth reference point in the lower-right and was sad - which is a dead giveaway - but tried scanning it anyway out of desperation and disappointment, because really, why would someone do this and *not* make it a real QR code? Sigh.
You don't need a fourth reference point, but you do need a perfect square. There can be interruptions in the square that error-correction will eliminate for less gathered data; but even if distorted, the reference points do need to form a square, and can't contain MORE data in one dimension than the other.
(ps. the exception is the new iQR, which does work with rectangular codes, but hasn't been implemented much yet)
Have you been eating that sandwich again?
equazcion
quality posts: 65
Private Messages
5of0 wrote:I beg to differ:
Stick that in your QR scanner and decode it. A true geek would know that QR codes are built to be very error-resistant, so they can be pretty distorted/obscured and work just fine.
Now, I looked at it and noticed the lack of the fourth reference point in the lower-right and was sad - that, unlike non-squareness, is a dead giveaway - but tried scanning it anyway out of desperation and disappointment, because really, why would someone do this and *not* make it a real QR code? Sigh.
Also your example wouldn't work since the positional elements define the QR code's edges. Your outer black area would be ignored by the scanner.
Have you been eating that sandwich again?
5of0
quality posts: 3
Private Messages
equazcion wrote:You don't need a fourth reference point, but you do need a perfect square. There can be interruptions in the square that error-correction will eliminate for less gathered data; but even if distorted, the reference points do need to form a square, and can't contain MORE data in one dimension than the other.
(ps. the exception is the new iQR, which does work with rectangular codes, but hasn't been implemented much yet)
For those confused from the front page: I created an alternate version up above that does actually scan, I don't have a magic phone that can scan things that aren't QR codes. Here's my version, which you should be able to scan just fine:
Orrriginal post:
Umm, sorry, but did you try scanning the image I put up there?
My phone (with QR Droid) scans that without a hitch. It has to be a perfectly square grid of pixels, yes, but nothing says those pixels themselves have to be square. And in fact, there are mechanisms in the QR code precisely so that those pixels don't have to be square - because they almost never actually are. Almost no one takes a picture of a QR code exactly straight on, so the pixels will always be distorted and trapezoids - or, in this case, rectangles.
And of course the outer black area will be ignored (as well as the right black bar) - I want them to be! They're not part of the QR code! I repeat: grab the nearest smartphone and scan the thing. It works. I didn't just throw together a concept, I threw together a proof of concept.
And I'm pretty confident that (except for QR version 1), the fourth square is a crucial part of the format, but I don't know that for sure.
<creative signature here>