Prøve GULL - Gratis
The Matrix, Decoded
Business Standard
|August 19, 2025
QR code, the little pixelated square, has changed how India pays or accesses information. Its applications are only limited by imagination
New Delhi, 18 August Last month, a video shared on Instagram showing a quick-response (QR) code embedded on a tombstone at a cemetery in Kerala went viral. Upon scanning the code, a website pops up, directing to a page that provides information about the person, including what he did, and family details of the deceased!
That may not have been the application QR code's Japanese founder had in mind when he was looking for a better alternative to barcodes in manufacturing setups. But today, if there is a ubiquitous face of the digital world, it could well be a pixelated one: the QR code. On roadside stalls, payment gateways, airline boarding passes, restaurant menus, product packaging, newspaper ads, and a host of other things, the small black-and-white square (a standard QR code is square, though there are also rectangular versions) has become a universal gateway to payment, information, and interaction. And its use cases are only expanding.
The rise of the QR code has been dramatic. Affordable smartphones, cheap mobile data and the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) have made it a default way of sending and receiving money for all kinds of merchants, online and offline. Beyond payment transactions, hospitals and diagnostic centers have started using QR codes to manage patient data. In colleges, students can scan these codes for assignments. And across companies, it could soon become the way to mark attendance.
The beginnings The QR code's origin dates back to 1994, when Japanese engineer Masahiro Hara was looking for a better alternative to barcodes to track auto parts at Denso Wave, the auto company he worked at. Barcodes could only store limited information and had to be scanned in one direction.
Hara came up with a two-dimensional matrix, which could store over 4,000 characters, be scanned from any angle, and withstand damage, thanks to an in-built error-correction technology.
Denne historien er fra August 19, 2025-utgaven av Business Standard.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Business Standard
Business Standard
Maruti, Hyundai grip wheel in a turning market
Exports, lean costs, and tax cuts keep growth engines humming, but next bend will call for sharper steering
2 mins
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Fighting the Raj from America
In the years before World War I, a wave of Indian immigrants arrived in the United States (US) seeking work.
4 mins
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Your credit is easier to steal than your money
TRUTH BE TOLD
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Govt taps IISc to boost critical minerals research
The Ministry of Mines has recogni-sed the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru, as one of the centres of excellence (CoE) under the National Critical Minerals Mission, a ₹16,300-crore initiative to bolster the country’s self-reliance in minerals essential for clean energy, defence and advanced technologies.
1 min
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Trump threatens military action against Nigeria over ‘killing of Christians’
President Donald Trump threatened possible US military action against Islamist militants in Nigeria if the country's government doesn't halt the groups' \"killing of Christians\".
1 min
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
TFCI's growth drivers: Hotels, real estate, MSME solar
The Tourism Finance Corporation of India (TFCI) is seeing strong demand for hospitality and real estate funding and plans to expand into new areas, such as micro, small, and medium enterprise (MSME) solar financing for the tourism sector, said Anoop Bali, managing director and chief executive officer of TCI, in an interview with Harsh Kumar in New Delhi.
2 mins
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Saudi Arabia's flyadeal to start India flights in Q1 of 2026: CEO
Bullish on the fast-growing Indian aviation market, Saudi Arabia's no-frills carrier flyadeal will start flights to Indian cities, including Mumbai, from the first quarter of 2026.
1 min
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Use passive funds to build stable, diversified, long-term core portfolio
Avoid need to chop and change funds due tounderperformance; supplement with active funds in satellite portion
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
Dubai's kids entertainment brand to debut in India in '26
Kids' luxury entertainment space, Boo Boo Laand, which is present in Dubai Mall, is expected to enter India by 2026, with its first launch in Mumbai's Jio World Plaza, a luxury shopping mall.
1 min
November 03, 2025
Business Standard
GST cut sees 2W owners upgrade to Maruti small cars
The share of small cars in Maruti Suzuki India has gone up sharply after the GST reforms, with the country’s largest carmaker witnessing a new profile of customers this festival season, who want to upgrade from two-wheelers to their first car buoyed up by the recent tax cuts.
2 mins
November 03, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
