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Smart Badges For Better Meetings

Roland Piquepaille writes "In an article appearing in the November 15th issue of New Scientist, we're told that the 500 attendants of the last Pop!Tech conference were carrying intelligent badges to put around their necks. EurekAlert! has released a version of this article, "Hello, will you be my friend?" These nTAGs, distributed by the nTAG Interactive company, contained personal details about their wearers. And as the nTags can communicate with each other via infrared links, they are able to send alerts when they see a good match between two owners. This doesn't come up cheap: expect $40 to $100 per badge per day, depending on the event. More details and references are contained in this overview which also includes pictures."

3 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. Stay away from me by CGP314 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While the idea of these things is good, they make it very difficult to avoid people you'd rather not waste your time with. The loud, twitchy, obnoxious, guy everyone is trying to stay away from better not have the same likes and dislikes as you - or 'Beep! Beep! Beep!' the badge will let him know you are a potential friend.

  2. This might seem like a trivial use of tech, but by unassimilatible · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What if people started wearing themse tags all the time, and the receivers became ubiquitous, maybe with an earpiece. Say you're at the grocery store, and you pass by someone you don't recognize, like a long lost relative, or that friend of a friend. Perhaps that one Halle Berry lookalike who is really into Linux. A conversation starts that might not have, possibly changing your life.

    But seriously. Perhaps it could lead to a sort of in-person IM or friendster..."hey, you on aisle 9, are you really into Everquest, kittens, and bondage? Me too!"

    Of course, there's the risk of spam, hacking, and stalkers...

    Actually, didn't someone propose just this sort of thing with cellphones?

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    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
  3. Absolutely Dreadful by dollar70 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It's been my experience that people who are natural socializers don't need any help from technology in order to get together, and the socially inept couldn't peel themselves from the wall with all the power of a beowolf cluster.

    Believe it or not, people actually have the inborn ability (instinct) to find compatible people around them. Adding this technology will only serve as a device to exclude undesireable contact moreso than to find desireable interaction.

    "Oh sorry, I'm really only interested in people who, like myself, have intimate first hand knowledge of the X-Men's superpowers."

    In the end, you will have the same groups interacting as they always have, and the ego stroking will show no deviation from what has been seen before. It will just be more efficient.

    And for those guys looking for meaningful one night stands, you'll still be spending the night with your old friend "Rosie Palmer".