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LinkedIn adds a QR code feature to its service

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LinkedIn is presenting two new highlights that will make the service more practical for its users. To begin with, LinkedIn will now give you a chance to interface through QR codes. In the LinkedIn application, tap the QR code symbol in the Home tab’s search bar, and there you’ll see a QR scanner and your own particular code. Filtering others’ codes or transferring a picture of one from your telephone will take you to that user’s profile and you can share your own particular code through messaging applications and email or add them to sites, email signature, your resume or occasion materials like handouts, identifications and laynards.

Besides, LinkedIn is adding a “See Translation” button on posts inside the LinkedIn Feed, the ongoing activity area on a client’s profile and a post detail pages. The interpretation is fueled by Microsoft Text Analytics API, which likewise gives interpretations to Bing, Skype, Office and Twitter, and is accessible for in excess of 60 dialects. Since buying LinkedIn in 2016, Microsoft has attempted to join it into its different items. The organization has discharged a LinkedIn-controlled Resume Assistant for Office 365 endorsers, consolidated LinkedIn points of interest into Outlook.com and added a component to its AI-fueled Pix camera application that gives clients a chance to discover a man’s LinkedIn profile through a preview of their physical business card.

The QR codes are accessible now for iOS and Android. The translation feature is accessible on the work area and portable web renditions of LinkedIn and will take off to iOS and Android applications in coming weeks.

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Image via atlantic special