The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's
notability guidelines for products and services. (December 2011) |
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (January 2024) |
SnapTag, invented by SpyderLynk, is a 2D mobile barcode alternative similar to a QR code, but that uses an icon or company logo and code ring rather than a square pattern of black dots. [1] [2]
Similar to a QR code, SnapTags can be used to take consumers to a brand’s website, but can also facilitate mobile purchases, [3] coupon downloads, free sample requests, video views, promotional entries, [4] Facebook Likes, Pinterest Pins, Twitter Follows, Posts and Tweets. [5] SnapTags offer back-end data mining capabilities. [6]
SnapTags can be used in Google's mobile Android operating system [7] and iOS devices (iPhone/iPod/iPad) [8] using The SnapTag Reader App or third party apps that have integrated the SnapTag Reader SDK. SnapTags can also be used by standard camera phones by taking a picture of the SnapTag and texting it to the designated short code or email address. [9] [10]
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's
notability guidelines for products and services. (December 2011) |
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (January 2024) |
SnapTag, invented by SpyderLynk, is a 2D mobile barcode alternative similar to a QR code, but that uses an icon or company logo and code ring rather than a square pattern of black dots. [1] [2]
Similar to a QR code, SnapTags can be used to take consumers to a brand’s website, but can also facilitate mobile purchases, [3] coupon downloads, free sample requests, video views, promotional entries, [4] Facebook Likes, Pinterest Pins, Twitter Follows, Posts and Tweets. [5] SnapTags offer back-end data mining capabilities. [6]
SnapTags can be used in Google's mobile Android operating system [7] and iOS devices (iPhone/iPod/iPad) [8] using The SnapTag Reader App or third party apps that have integrated the SnapTag Reader SDK. SnapTags can also be used by standard camera phones by taking a picture of the SnapTag and texting it to the designated short code or email address. [9] [10]