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Sunday, 15th July 2007

Exbiblio: Scan a printed page, get a website

From the Puget Sound Biz Journal:

A Seattle startup is working on a novel device that could capture a few words from a book or printed article and quickly find the full text on the web.

The company, Exbiblio, expects to have a prototype ready in the fall that could span the growing divide between the internet and the world of printed material.

The device Exbiblio is developing will house a small optical reader, which connects via a cable to a computer. Users can scan a snippet of printed text -- as few as six words at a time -- and use that "identifying barcode" to find the corresponding full text on the web, King said.

A person reading a printed newspaper, for example, could instantly get an online version of an article and e-mail it to friends or colleagues. Such a technology could take the advantages of the web -- the interactivity and ability to directly measure traffic -- and apply that to the printed word.

Sounds somewhat similar to some of what's being done at:
+ Mobot
Cameraphone image search.

+ Semacode.org and Semapedia

+ Qode


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