This still generates the "data" using that rust library via wasm, but the rendering is all editable javascript to make an SVG or paint on an HTML canvas.
I was especially inspired by https://qrbtf.com which had some unique style options I had never seen before, which I ended up copying, and then I made some more.
I basically only tested these on my own phone, a pixel 7 with default camera app, so I'm not surprised people with different hardware/software are getting varied results. I think I might try to automate testing using different scanners if I can figure that out.
Does anyone know if these are today implemented in neural networks or something? Specialized hardware? Or just very well optimized. Sometimes it feels like only 1 frame in the camera is enough, and distance, angle, lighting and focus is not important.
Some of these, like examples/blocks.svg[1], are not immediately recognized as qr codes by humans. This could lead to interesting possibilities; e.g. art with qr code/codes seamlessly integrated into it - and perhaps noticed only after someone tries to take a picture.
[1]: https://github.com/zhengkyl/qrframe/blob/b7705844b71764bcea8...
0. https://github.com/zhengkyl/qrframe/blob/b7705844b71764bcea8...
I (well, GPT-4) built freeqrgenerator.app specifically for my wife because she kept using the malicious sites that inject a redirect that inevitably die and stop working.
Thinking I can retire mine and use yours instead on the domain.
It's hard to find, but here are two other generator sites that are free and nice to use.
https://qr.grid.ws/ only has a text box and a download button
https://qrcode.antfu.me/ has a lot of options
Always gives me dejavu and that feeling you get when you suddenly start encountering some new topic or word in suspiciously large amounts.
Some big sciency/techy outlet puts something interesting out, and suddenly related topics start popping up everywhere else. I am guilty of a few of these myself.
Also, this library is amazing. I might use it.
Isn't the whole point of QR codes to reliably transfer information from the physical world into the digital one without specialized equipment or software? They look pretty, sure, but so did DataGlyphs (https://www.microglyphs.com/english/html/dataglyphs.shtml) and those could be scanned reliably, just not by your average phone.