I'm not completely in the habit yet (since last I looked it didn't work on
my phone), but I like the combination of paper business cards and Evernote
Hello.

You can scan a business card from an iDevice (hopefully soon from an
Android device as well) and it can match up with certain other contact
sources including LinkedIn as well as giving you space to track meetings
and personal notes. It's stored in Evernote as well so you can get the info
online as well as on your device.

Robert


On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 7:28 AM, Alan Robertson <al...@unix.sh> wrote:

>  Ditto for Pamela and Matt.
>
> On 10/07/2013 08:25 AM, Pamela Lynn Howell wrote:
>
> I do exactly the same as Matt.
>
> Often working in infosec, I tend not to trust blindly provided QR codes.
> On Oct 7, 2013 9:59 AM, "Matt Simmons" <standalone.sysad...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> 1) I use business cards to find people on LinkedIn.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 9:28 AM, Adam Moskowitz <ad...@menlo.com> wrote:
>>
>>> With LISA '13 [1] right around the corner, I got to thinking about how
>>> "the cool kids" prefer to exchange contact information in a face-to-face
>>> setting. I'd appreciate it if you'd please take a minute or two to
>>> answer a few questions. Again, this is specifically about face-to-face
>>> interactions, typically with someone you're meeting for the first time.
>>>
>>> 1) Do you prefer exchanging contact information by trading business
>>>    cards or some electronic-based mechanism?
>>>
>>> If you said "business cards," you can stop here.
>>>
>>> 2) Is your preferred electronic mechanism based on QR codes?
>>>
>>> 3) If you answered "no" to #2, please tell me the name of the program
>>>    (system, etc.) that you use (then you can stop).
>>>
>>> 4) If you use a system based on QR codes, is your contact information:
>>>    a) encoded in the QR code itself (typically as a v-card)?
>>>    b) stored somewhere on the web and the QR code contains the URL
>>>       of this web page?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Adam
>>>
>>>
>>> [1] https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa13
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>>
>>
>>
>>  --
>> LITTLE GIRL: But which cookie will you eat FIRST?
>> COOKIE MONSTER: Me think you have misconception of cookie-eating process.
>>
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>
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> --
>     Alan Robertson <al...@unix.sh> <al...@unix.sh> - @OSSAlanR
>
> "Openness is the foundation and preservative of friendship...  Let me claim 
> from you at all times your undisguised opinions." - William Wilberforce
>
>
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