Something that I have found very interesting:
In New Zealand the QR codes are like the "Works Now" NSW ones. The combination of the A4 page size, the QR code taking up most of that page and peoples natural standing distance away from the posters, roughly means that the QR code takes up most of their screen. And I am not sure why, but some phones seem to really struggle with this setup.
And when the code won't scan, people's natural tendency is to then move closer to the QR code (make it fill the whole screen), which doesn't help at all. But if they instead initially move away it can fix the issue.
I'm not sure what would cause this? Maybe a reduction in relative angular distortion? Or perhaps only a crop of the image is "scanned" for QR codes?
But yeah this, (very) anecdotal, data point would counterintuitively push for a smaller QR code than "Works now"(maybe 10-20%).
The best experience I have had was the Queensland system. The QR codes I saw were different than explained at the end of this article. They were small (Original NSW size) but very simple codes. From the look and the number below, I assumed it was just a 6 digit number. Those would scan very fast (as in while I was still moving the phone at speed to align with the QR code).
In NZ the behaviour is: stop, aim, scan, wait, done. But in Queensland it worked so well I could just keep walking, wave my phone in the direction of the barcode and it would catch it.
Anyway, I just found those experiences very interesting, maybe others will too :)
From my experience, the problem is the lamination of the NZ ones, causing refraction and making it hard to scan. I find that even at the right distance I have to move my phone left and right until the light isn't reflecting
The QLD ones suffer the same issue. I imagine not as bad. But anecdotally the plain paper codes scan as fast as you want. The laminated ones you have to move the camera about to make sure there is no glare interfering with the image
In SA the codes are fairly small and scan very fast from a distance. Even if they are laminated and placed behind a window they scan easily. Meanwhile the gigantic QR code printed on a 7 foot poster which was used for express check-in at the Wayville showgrounds vaccination hub just did not work on my phone.
And when the code won't scan, people's natural tendency is to then move closer to the QR code (make it fill the whole screen), which doesn't help at all. But if they instead initially move away it can fix the issue.
I'm not sure what would cause this? Maybe a reduction in relative angular distortion? Or perhaps only a crop of the image is "scanned" for QR codes?
But yeah this, (very) anecdotal, data point would counterintuitively push for a smaller QR code than "Works now"(maybe 10-20%).
The best experience I have had was the Queensland system. The QR codes I saw were different than explained at the end of this article. They were small (Original NSW size) but very simple codes. From the look and the number below, I assumed it was just a 6 digit number. Those would scan very fast (as in while I was still moving the phone at speed to align with the QR code).
In NZ the behaviour is: stop, aim, scan, wait, done. But in Queensland it worked so well I could just keep walking, wave my phone in the direction of the barcode and it would catch it.
Anyway, I just found those experiences very interesting, maybe others will too :)