Digital QR Codes Offer Interactive Cemetery Experience in Britain - East Idaho News
World

Digital QR Codes Offer Interactive Cemetery Experience in Britain

  Published at

ht barcode grave jp 120906 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1347016485235Courtesy Chester Pearce Associates(LONDON) — For centuries we have marked our dead with lifeless granite — graves inscribed with names, dates, perhaps small inscriptions about the departed.  But stones do not tell stories.

Now, a funeral home in Britain is attaching tiny digital codes to headstones, giving visitors the chance to see, hear, even experience the lives of the dead.  No longer are graveyard visitors limited to letters and numbers etched into tombstones.

The markers, known as Quick Response or QR codes, look like a combination of a barcode and Rorschach blot and are attached to the back corner of the stone.  A smartphone with a QR reader can scan the code, launching websites or multimedia collections created by the family, providing an interactive life story to anyone standing over the grave, or logging in online.

“It is about keeping the memory of someone alive,” Stephen Nimmo, managing director of the funeral home Chester Pearce Associates, told ABC News.  “This man or woman really did something — these are the people they knew, these are their family, this is where they went.  You can learn a lot more about people than what you see on the stone.”

QR codes have been used in advertisements for years, and a handful of American funeral homes began attaching them to gravestones in early 2011.  This appears to be the first time they have been placed on gravestones in the United Kingdom.

Nimmo said the codes are for both visitors and the family.  Anyone walking through a graveyard who spots a code can scan it.  And the family can create online memorials to the dead.

“For the families, it’s part of the grieving process,” Nimmo said in a phone conversation from Poole, along the southern coast of England.  “But it’s more for strangers.  Certainly in the U.K., people go to cemeteries and have a historical interest.  People are more interested in not only his name, but what he looked like.  For a country that doesn’t talk about death, there’s a morbid fascination in it.”

Nimmo launched the service, which costs about $600, two weeks ago.  He said he has signed up 10 customers and hasn’t encountered much resistance or anyone objecting to technology impinging on tradition.  He also offers versions that can attach to benches, trees — anywhere a family has chosen to mark their loved ones.

“Sometimes, the British are reticent to doing anything new. God forbid we should do anything too modern,” he said.  “This has so much more information than the headstone can ever offer.”

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

SUBMIT A CORRECTION