My two cents on QR: the coding is not new so much as it is now starting to spread and be integrated in various platforms and applications in creative ways. Monument companies are now selling headstones with QR included (webpage hosted and the whole deal) and you can buy a QR headstone retrofit for around $100 and it is applied to an existing headstone. My perspective about QR is it is not about the destination but rather QR is simply another conduit to drive traffic to your on-line destination. It's freely constructed and since it is a way to inform others about your website information it would seem logical that we should take advantage of every opportunity to communicate your QR code but it doesn't serve a purpose on the webpage other than the page promoting this is how others can acquire your code so they can spread the word for you. My wife is a watercolor artist and I have been talking with her about her creating a watercolor work of her QR code that can be converted to a poster for prints or put on T-shirts. What remains is the age old question that we have always been dealing with as to how do we best serve those who visit our websites. The issues in the past were simply browsers such as windows or apple. Now it is more complex with competing browsers cross-sectioned by devices such as iPhone, iPad, etc. Ron Ron Yates Http://www.yatesville.net Sent from my iPad On Jul 22, 2011, at 9:04 AM, Billie Walsh <bilwalsh@swbell.net> wrote: > On 07/22/2011 05:20 AM, Jim Loudon wrote: >> >>> [re: QR codes] it looks like a good use would be on a brochure at the >>> library or local society. Someone could just scan the QR Code and their >>> device would take them to your site. >> >> >>