CBSE Board Exams 2026: The board has advised all stakeholders to exercise caution. The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on Thursday evening issued an advisory urging students, parents, ...
Scientists have created a microscopic QR code so tiny it can only be seen with an electron microscope—smaller than most bacteria and now officially a world record. But this isn’t just about size; it’s ...
Scientists have created a QR code that is smaller than most bacteria, offering a novel way to store data. Using beams of charged particles, a team from Vienna University of Technology in Austria ...
QR codes are everywhere—from menus to payments—but scammers are now weaponizing them in sophisticated ways. These “quishing” attacks hide malicious links behind harmless-looking codes. Knowing how to ...
QR codes are built into the modern internet experience. You point your phone at the square with a strange pattern, and it'll load a website on your phone, which will offer specific information. But ...
QR codes have become a convenience of modern life. Just scan the black and white mosaic with your phone’s camera and you can do everything from connect to your hotel room Wi-Fi to pay for that public ...
April 22, 2026: We looked for new Brawl Stars QR codes, the latest of which offers a free Naija box. We looked for more creator and sushi codes, too, and also made sure all existing codes still work.
For those of us who weren't paying attention, over the last few years, scientists around the world have been one-upping each other in a bid to create the smallest QR code that can be reliably read.
A research team at TU Wien and Cerabyte just shrunk the QR code to an impossible scale. Their creation measures only 1.98 square micrometers. This makes the code smaller than most bacteria. It is so ...
Just how small can a QR code be? Small enough that it can only be recognized with an electron microscope. A research team at TU Wien, working together with the data storage technology company Cerabyte ...
Quishing is proving effective, too, with millions of people unknowingly opening malicious websites. In fact, 73% of Americans admit to scanning QR codes without checking if the source is legitimate.
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