Hey man - I forgot you did this, just signed up as an advertiser :)
On 02/05/06, Russell Buckley <russell@mobhappy.com> wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> Time to break my long lurking habit on this list.
>
> I'm looking for some WAP site owners to join AdMob's advertising network.
> We
> serve text-based pay-per-click ads on our partners' WAP sites and share
> the
> resulting revenue. While we're only 100 days old, we've already served 20
> million ads and started to generate real revenue for our network.
>
> Sites can be based anywhere, though the strongest advertiser spend is in
> the
> US and UK and English language. That doesn't mean others can't join, just
> that revenue opportunities are likely to be slightly delayed.
>
> Please sign up (free) at www.admob.com or contact me off-list by email or
> phone below.
>
> Kind regards
>
> Russell Buckley
> AdMob
> www.admob.com
> Blog: www.mobhappy.com
> Office: +49 8151 739 572
> Mobile: +49 176 5013 0225
> Skype: russell_buckley
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net [mailto:
> keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net]
> On Behalf Of Jim Levinger
> Sent: 22 April 2006 17:23
> To: keitai-l@appelsiini.net
> Subject: (keitai-l) Re: QR codes
>
> Symbol and other traditional scanning companies believe that the already
> provide a "universal" scanner. Their typical optical scanning devices will
> support a full range of industrial 1D and 2D codes. But take a look at the
> prices of the systems. Their wireless devices cost between $1200-$2500.
> They
> are focused on dedicated business applications not consumers.
>
> Their view is that hardware should be specially built to read codes. Their
> units come with special optics, LED arrays for illumination, and
> monochrome
> sensors. This is a far cry from the standard cell phone.
>
> PDF-417 developed and patented by Symbol is a perfect example. They
> invented
> the code and put it in the public domain but to effectively read it one
> needs to license laser based IP that Symbol has patents on.
>
> To work with standard cell phones and consumer applications is a totally
> different mindset and requires different code formats. Chasing after these
> industrial code formats is a losing battle. Advertisers, consumers, and
> handset manufacturers should not have their applications constrained by
> the
> industrial specifications that are inherent in these formats created by
> scanning hardware companies. Symbol, Denso, and ID Matrix never envisioned
> camera phones as a reading platform or consumers as users.
>
> Jim Levinger
> -----Original Message-----
> From: keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net [mailto:
> keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net]
> On Behalf Of Timothy J Mckinnon
> Sent: Saturday, April 22, 2006 3:47 AM
> To: keitai-l@appelsiini.net
> Subject: (keitai-l) Re: QR codes
>
> Some time back *circa 1999, I bought a SPT1700 Symbol-Palm hand scanner
> that
> did 2D (PDF) codes, and a slew of barcodes. As it is most likely a
> firmware
> upgrade, you may want to lean on SYMBOL to provide the software for a
> universal hand scanner.
>
> timbo
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net
> [mailto:keitai-l-bounce@appelsiini.net]On Behalf Of David Harper
> Sent: Saturday, April 22, 2006 4:59 PM
> To: keitai-l@appelsiini.net
> Subject: (keitai-l) Re: QR codes
>
>
> At the risk of self promotion (but with helpful intentions)...
>
> A few of the Keitai-l list members provided me with information on QR
> Codes in the past that led to this recent post:
>
> Mainstream America is Ready for Bar Codes - Converging "Realspace" and
> "Mobilespace"
> http://harper.wirelessink.com/?p=83
>
> The research convinced us at WINKsite to provide support for 3 formats
> of bar codes - QR Code, Semacode, and mCode.
>
> As such, WINKsite now generates a set of unique bar codes for each of
> our publishers that link directly to their mobile sites and communities.
>
> With the ability to create a universally accessible mobile site that's
> connected to physically distributed bar codes, we see our publishers
> creating a wide range of useful applications (listed in the above
> mentioned post.)
>
> ...any one up to developing a universal bar code reader?
>
> Dave Harper
> Founder, WINKsite.com
>
>
>
>
> This mail was sent to address mckint@ecomm.net.au
> Need archives? How to unsubscribe? http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
>
>
>
> This mail was sent to address jlevinger@nextcodecorp.com
> Need archives? How to unsubscribe? http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
>
>
> This mail was sent to address russell@unstatic.co.uk
> Need archives? How to unsubscribe? http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
>
>
>
>
> This mail was sent to address alfied@gmail.com
> Need archives? How to unsubscribe? http://www.appelsiini.net/keitai-l/
>
>
--
Alfie Dennen
Web and mobile
www.moblog.co.uk
M: 0044 7891 651 711
O: 0044 20 8123 5295
E: alfie@al4ie.com
www.al4ie.com
Received on Tue May 2 19:25:33 2006