I needed to make a QR code again. It's one of those tasks that's useful enough to pop up regularly, but not frequently enough for you to have a go-to solution. When the need arises, you end up googling "QR code generator" and picking the least sketchy-looking option from the results. A couple ads and some invisible trackers are just the price you pay, right?
Not today.
Rather than bemoan the fact that there's no easy way to get QR ohne Schnickschnak without the low-key parasitic monetization, I found a library (qrious) and put together just enough Javascript code to generate QR codes in the browser. No ads; page views are counted with self-hosted Plausible (privacy-friendly, no cookies). Your QR content is not sent anywhere.
Go ahead and inspect the page source. Save it to your computer, copy it, remix it, whatever you want.
This is my act of resistance: I'll pay for the domain name and hosting just so you and I don't ever have to give one more click or tracker data-point to some questionable "free" site again. If you find this useful, you can pay it back by making or doing something of your own and giving it away freely.
This is the web we were trying to build.
Be excellent to each other.
Unter QR-Inhalt wählst du, was kodiert wird: freier Text oder URL, WLAN-Zugangsdaten (WIFI-QR) oder einen Kalendertermin. Im Modus „Termin“ erzeugt der QR-Code einen Standard-iCalendar-Eintrag (VEVENT), den viele Smartphones beim Scannen in die Kalender-App übernehmen. Datumseingabe als TT/MM/JJJJ, Uhrzeit im 24-Stunden-Format; die Zeitzone ist Europe/Berlin. Deine Eingaben für den QR-Code werden nicht an einen Server gesendet.