But only if you can access the information. Not everyone will have the capability or it may not work for a variety of reasons.But that URL can point to an enormous amount of information...
But that URL can point to an enormous amount of information...
Tom Rankin said:But that URL can point to an enormous amount of information...
Only if everyone can access that information with high reliability.Bingo! We have a winner, ladies and gentlemen.
Only if everyone can access that information with high reliability.
* Not everyone owns (or carries) expensive smart phones.
* Expensive smart phones are generally not weather resistant.
* Many trail locations do not have adequate cellphone signals.
QR codes are the equivalent of signs that only be read by a fraction of the hikers...
Doug
I'd bet it's higher. I've contended that hiking is an endeavor that requires a higher than average income.That translates into 35% of all adults."
So, if the 35% figure is accurate, we don't know how representative that is of the hiker community. If it is representative, that's still much potentiality (there's that word again).
the Pew Internet Project finds that one third of American adults – 35% – own smartphones.
Reminds me of the person or persons who carved "Jah rastarfari",all over the whites about a year ago,funny stuff. Who needs a smart phone when you can have a smart chisel?But we should not encourage a earthfirst type of anti-tech. vandalism on signs in the whites.If someone hand carves them with a chisel, I will be impressed.
I think there is an issue of differing unstated assumptions from different posters...Doug - your arguments are most always quite sound and logical, but I don't think your points are valid this time. An increasing number of people (and already a critical mass) have smartphones, QR codes can link to unlimited amounts of information, and there is cell coverage at an already large, and growing, number of locations where these would be best deployed in the Whites.
Navigation can be a life-or-death issue in backcountry travel and IMO removing signs and replacing then with QR codes is dangerous because it will deny vital information to some users. On the other hand, I have no fundamental problem* with adding QR codes to existing signs as long as the basic navigational info is human-readable without a QR code reader.
I didn't see it stated either way...I totally agree with that. Unless I missed it, I don't think anyone has suggested replacing critical trail info (e.g., distance, arrows, names) with QR codes. If you go look at the pictures of examples that started this debate you'll see the QRs are in addition to the usual info.
I'd bet it's higher. I've contended that hiking is an endeavor that requires a higher than average income.
Aren't you the QleveR one!I probably wouldn't even notice a QR code since I don't even really look at trail signs any more - been there enough to know exactly where I am going.
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I know from running vftt.org that the mobile users are not to be discounted - there are plenty of them reading this on a smart phone.
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