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{{Short description|Type of polar matrix barcode}}
{{no footnotes|date=July 2012}}
[[Image:shotcode.png|right|Sample ShotCode linking to this article.|200px]]
'''ShotCode''' is a circular [[barcode]] created by High Energy Magic of [[Cambridge University]]. It uses a [[dartboard]]-like circle, with a [[Bullseye (target)|bullseye]] in the centre and ''datacircles'' surrounding it. The technology reads databits from
ShotCodes are designed to be read with a regular camera (including those found on [[mobile phone]]s and [[webcam]]s) without the need to purchase other specialised hardware. ShotCodes differ from [[matrix barcode]]s in that they do not store regular data - rather, they store a look up number consisting of 40 bits of data. This needs to link to a server that holds information regarding a mapped [[Uniform Resource Locator|URL]] which the reading device can connect to in order to download said data.
== History ==
ShotCode was created in 1999 at the [[University of Cambridge]] when researching a low cost vision based method to track locations and developed [[TRIPCode]] as a result. It has been used to track printed TRIPCode paperbadges in realtime with webcams. After that in Cambridge it had another research use; to read barcodes with mobile phone
== ShotCode's software ==
The software used to read a ShotCode captured by a mobile camera is called ‘ShotReader’. It is lightweight and is only around 17kB. It ‘reads’ the camera’s picture of a ShotCode in real time and prompts
== See also ==
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==External links==
*
*[http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1055959.1055965 Using visual tags to bypass Bluetooth device discovery, Mobile Computing and Communications Review, Volume 9, Number 1, 2005] (by SpotCode people)
*[http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/SRG/netos/uid/spotcode.html SpotCode in action videos from University of Cambridge]
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[[Category:Barcodes]]
[[Category:
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