For the rest of us like you (who prefer cheap or free stuff..), the best
place to begin is open source.
See http://sourceforge.jp/projects/qrcode/
I've seen individuals creating QR code reader, I believe they did not
start from ISO specs, which is not only expensive but hard to read. I
E.g., have Java QR code reader on my au that I downloaded for free from
an individual's website.
On Sun, 06 Mar 2005 22:23:49 +0100
Noriyasu <noriyasu@web.de> wrote:
> Thank you very much to all.
>
> Benjamin Joffe wrote:
>
> >I guess that if you get the specification document from ISO (200 CHF, ~180 USD for the paper or electronic version) you should have all required information to code
> >a reader as well (which would probably be faster than reverse-engineer the coding method from an encoder).
> >
> >
> As I am a student it is more a matter of money than a matter of time.
> So first I am going to try to develop some reverse-engineered software
> if possible.
> If not, I will rethink about the spec documents.
>
> Regards,
> Noriyasu
>
>
>
> This mail was sent to address asiboro@maltech.ne.jp
> Need archives? How to unsubscribe? http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
>
Arnold P. Siboro (asiboro@maltech.ne.jp)
"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
- Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943
Received on Mon Mar 7 01:04:08 2005