QR Codes
‘Smart Pajamas’ Read Bedtime Stories To Children Via QR Codes (VIDEO)
Juan Murdoch, founder of Smart PJs. Murdoch came up with the idea while using QR codes in his real estate work in Idaho.
We are living in a day and age where billions of dollars are being spent using technology to attach the computer and its myriad smart devices to the human body . This merging of man and machine is known as singularity. We believe that internal smart devices, accepted by mainstream society, is only 18-24 months away. Our conditioning for the acceptance of technology to completely dominate every aspect of our lives is nearly complete.
WASHINGTON – The bedtime ritual of a child putting on pajamas, cuddling with a parent, while reading a bedtime story has remained largely unchanged for centuries.
Until now.
Smart PJs are storytelling pajamas, that use mobile technology, similar to a QR code, to display bedtime favorites on a smartphone or tablet.
“Being a parent of 6 kids myself, I know kids like bedtime stories,” says Juan Murdoch, founder of Smart PJs. Murdoch came up with the idea while using QR codes in his real estate work in Idaho.
QR is short for Quick Response Code – the two-dimensional barcode consisting of square dots – that is easily scanned. The bedtime stories are contained in the polka dots on the child’s pajamas, which are available in pink or blue.
“You scan one of those dot patterns on the kid’s pajamas – there are 47 different ones – and each one of those dot patterns is a bedtime story,” says Murdoch.
To choose a story, parent or child launches the Smart PJs Stories app (free, in Apple Store for iOS, or Google Play for Android), and holds the device’s camera over the dot patterns.
“You take the picture, and it automatically launches the story,” Murdoch says. Murdoch says most of the stories contained in the app are in the public domain.
“It’s all the classics,” Murdoch says. “Cinderella, The Gingerbread Man, Old Mother Hubbard, Humpty Dumpty.” Murdoch hired voice actors and artists to record the stories and illustrate the slides that correspond with the story.
Since many children practice reading while reading books at bedtime, Murdoch says he attempted to make the app educational, as well as entertaining.
“We put the actual words to the story on the screen,” Murdoch says. “As the narrator is reading the story you can actually follow along.”
Murdoch says despite being interactive, the pajamas are comfortable. “Some people think there might be wires that are hidden in the pajamas, but that’s not the case at all,” Murdoch says.
While the comfort of Smart PJs might surprise some, the washing and care instructions will seem familar to most parents.
“The pajamas are 100 percent cotton, so they might shrink a bit,” says Murdoch. source – WTOP
End Times
Tenn. State University Requires Students to Wear RFID Microchip Tracking IDs
“Failure to comply with the new policy,” the school said, “may result in employee disciplinary action, student judicial action, or removal from University property.”
We watch as, one by one, all our major institutions and corporations are mandating the RFID microchip wearable tracking devices. It won’t be very long before these mandated devices will be implanted to avoid theft. Even Walt Disney’s Magic Kingdom will not let you enjoy their parks without being tracked by RFID.
National Review: Beginning Saturday, March 1, students and staff at Tennessee State University will be required to present identification badges at any time that can also track their movements in and out of buildings, according to a local-news report.
After a spate of break-ins and vandalism, officials at the university instituted the new ID requirement as a way to ensure safety on campus, a TSU release said.
“Our primary concern is always to provide a safe and healthy environment for all of our students, employees and visitors,” said Dr. Curtis Johnson, associate vice president for administration, who is in charge of Emergency Management. “Safety on our campus is priority number one, and with the new policy we want to ensure that our students, faculty, and staff are safe at all times.”
“Failure to comply with the new policy,” the school said, “may result in employee disciplinary action, student judicial action, or removal from University property.” Besides being used to access buildings, the IDs can be used as meal cards, to check out library materials, to access computer labs and athletic events, and more. source – National Review
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