All --

  There is a QR code on the front page of this . . . QR codes are reasonably 
redundant, so you can just plop whatever you want in the middle (as long as you 
don't obliterate too much), and it will generally still work . . .

      
http://csustan.csustan.edu/~tom/Lecture-Notes/Nonlinear-Systems/Nonlinear-Systems.pdf

  (these are in progress lecture notes for a class I teach . . .)

  Thanks . . .

Tom Carter

On Mar 18, 2012, at 5:18 PM, Russ Abbott wrote:

> Neat idea. Here are some images that actually scan. I found them with a 
> simple search for "QR Code" on Google images. The site linked to was on page 
> 8.
>  
> -- Russ
> 
> 
> On Sun, Mar 18, 2012 at 2:08 PM, Arlo Barnes <arlo.bar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have seen artistic modifications to QR codes - things like the Go board, 
> but also different colourations across a code, and even logos obscuring parts 
> of the center (not sure how that works, I guess there is a lot of redundancy?)
> I think the most interesting was a QR cookie (I shall endeavor to find 
> pictures).
> -Arlo James Barnes
> 
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