Digital driver’s licenses — now being built in many states — have a big problem that almost nobody is addressing: the likelihood that once they make it very frictionless to share our ID, we are likely ...
For Jennifer Wilson and James Shields, there’s personal motivation behind opening Vitalogy, their new bar on the ground floor of a 142-year-old brick building in Printer’s Row. “One of the biggest ...
Benjamin Claeys is CEO of QR TIGER, MENU TIGER and GiftLips. He also hosts Stay QRious, a podcast about QR code best practices. Barcodes have been a staple of commerce since the first UPC barcode was ...
Talk about a hidden value. Walmart shoppers are losing their minds after learning that the store’s budget-friendly Great Value items come equipped with invisible barcodes — a secret hiding in plain ...
The time it takes to fumble around with items at self-checkout, searching for barcode after barcode to scan, really adds up. Walmart thinks it has found a solution for that. The retail giant added ...
One of life’s grand existential inquiries is launched by a simple yet fundamental question: “Who am I?” The answer to that query is nuanced and evolves seismically for some, based on one’s season of ...
Sometimes there are hidden patterns in numbers you might not immediately notice. One example of this is in barcodes, the sequences of digits we use to identify products. Try it yourself – find an ...
How would you like a Pearl Jam prize package largely centered around the 30th anniversary of the band's Vitalogy release? This truly is a special package that Loudwire Nights has put together for you ...
Forward-looking: For almost five decades, the humble barcode has been found on the packaging of almost every consumer item in the world. But there's a push to get rid of them within just two years, ...
Pearl Jam recorded Vitalogy while on tour in support of Vs. The album was considered a bit of a departure from the band’s grunge sound, as it featured more punk and hardcore influences, as well as ...
"They were rehearsing a lot during soundchecks," Brett Eliason — who has worked as an engineer, producer and mixer for countless bands — told Loudwire Nights host Chuck Armstrong on Friday (Dec. 6).