JAGTAG brings 2D barcode reading to Twitter
From the press release:
Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment and JAGTAG, the only 2D barcode solution that does not require consumers to download an application and the only mobile medium to successfully deliver optimized multimedia to standard phones and smartphones, today announced the launch of the first viable Twitter integration from a 2D barcode tied to the Blu-ray/ DVD launch of X-Men Origins: Wolverine. The Twitter integration allows consumers to tweet with 2D barcodes, sharing exclusive video content from X-Men Origins: Wolverine with their friends and followers.
1. You take a picture of a JAGTAG you see out in the field (the one to the right is the demo tag from the JAGTAG website)
2. You save it to your library
3. You open a mobile Twitter client (I used TwitBird Pro)
4. Open and type a new tweet
5. Attach the photo of the JAGTAG in your library (TwitBird Pro uses Twitpic to upload and encode a link to the photo)
6. Append JAGTAG’s shortcode preceded with the @ symbol (@524824) to the end of your tweet.
So, the tweet would look like this:
getdonovan http://twitpic.com/f4mjj @524824
Once you do this, the JAGTAG will be decoded and that content will be returned as a link in your account’s @ mentions. You can then re-tweet that mention to easily pass the link on to your followers. The response will look like this:
524824 @getdonovan See our demo video here: http://tinyurl.com/nghfx6
Why is this important? Well there are a few things to note.
1. This bypasses the need for MMS functionality to decode a JAGTAG, say, if you are on an iPhone. MMS is still lacking on iPhone (until Sept. 25th unless you have already taken measures into your own hands with certain hacks available out there). So, you can use Twitter as a surrogate MMS solution for the iPhone. (Incidentally, JAGTAG does support an email solution for iPhone—emailing tag pics to jag@jagtag.net gets a similar response, just via email).
2. It automatically posts the content link into Twitter for you, eliminating the need to cut and past a URL string for the compelling content you want to broadcast on Twitter. This is a nice shortcut anyone on a mobile device can appreciate. And if it’s compelling content you are looking for…just check out JAGTAG’s recent campaign with Sport Illustrated for the Swim Suit Issue. ZING!
Now, if only I could find a JAGTAG to decode that’s not just an ad for a mobile phone or DVD (see Nokia’s JAGTAG-wielding ad in Wired for an example). That’s not really the content I want to pass on to others. It is still valuable but more for personal consumption. I think once JAGTAG reaches a critical mass of clients publishing content that, while still possibly ad-based, has functional and informational value on its own (location based content, time sensitive events, limited use content…basically all the plans their web site lays out) that we’ll see their speed to market with this Twitter-based experience will have proven worthwhile.