Connect with the dead via grave barcode
Barcodes are being placed on the gravestones by funeral directors in the UK to allow visitors to pay tributes to the departed and divulge details with the swipe of a mobile phone.
LONDON: Barcodes are being placed on the gravestones by funeral directors in the UK to allow visitors to pay tributes to the departed and divulge details with the swipe of a mobile phone.
The barcodes are being placed over the headstones to provide them a rather modern makeover and making them interactive for visitors.
When scanned on a smartphone, the square codes, known as Quick Response or QR codes, launch a website which contains a biography of the deceased. The page can include a profile of the person, photographs and videos of them and tributes from family and friends, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
The first funeral director to provide the service in the UK is Chester Pearce, in Poole, Dorset.
Its managing director Stephen Nimmo said the QR codes are etched onto a small granite or metal square before being embedded or glued on to a gravestone.
"I thought we could use technology to provide more information about people who have died to bring back the memories. People can make their websites as simple or as complicated as they like and add as much or as little information as they want," Nimmo said.
The expired person's loved ones can use a password to create and update the website and add more comments or memories as time goes by.
If visitors know the password, they can even add their own tributes.
The technology, however, doesn't come cheap, with the QR codes costing up to 300 and an additional charge of 95 for the hosting and set-up of the website.
PTI
The barcodes are being placed over the headstones to provide them a rather modern makeover and making them interactive for visitors.
When scanned on a smartphone, the square codes, known as Quick Response or QR codes, launch a website which contains a biography of the deceased. The page can include a profile of the person, photographs and videos of them and tributes from family and friends, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
The first funeral director to provide the service in the UK is Chester Pearce, in Poole, Dorset.
Its managing director Stephen Nimmo said the QR codes are etched onto a small granite or metal square before being embedded or glued on to a gravestone.
"I thought we could use technology to provide more information about people who have died to bring back the memories. People can make their websites as simple or as complicated as they like and add as much or as little information as they want," Nimmo said.
The expired person's loved ones can use a password to create and update the website and add more comments or memories as time goes by.
If visitors know the password, they can even add their own tributes.
The technology, however, doesn't come cheap, with the QR codes costing up to 300 and an additional charge of 95 for the hosting and set-up of the website.
PTI