Radio Frequency Identification Technology for Logistics, Tagging and EPC

Johnson County Library preps for RFID project

Friday, November 4, 2011

Johnson County Library, Kan. is making the necessary preparations to install RFID equipment and add tags to its entire collection of books and audiovisual material.

The library will temporarily close its doors to begin tagging of materials. The project will assist staff to better manage the collection, reducing the number of lost and missing items, while also improving customer satisfaction.


The Antioch Library will be one of the first in the district to receive the system, following by the Lackman Library branch. Officials will then evaluate the project before moving on to the remainder of the county’s 13 locations.

The RFID system will help further help reduce mis-shelved or missing items, while adding support for the automatic check-in of books and other materials as they are returned. The automatic system will allow more staff time available to help patrons on the floor and lead to fewer mistakes in checking in/out materials. [end] 

Bibliotheca announced the recent large-scale installation of its RFID-based automated material handling solutions in one of Berlin’s major public libraries, the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Library.

The deployment includes Bibliotheca’s 400 series return and sorting system - ‘smartreturn’ and ‘smartsort’ - which offers sorting speeds of 2,400 item/hour. Additionally, Dietrich Bonhoeffer is able to offer patrons self-service checkout through the ‘smartserve’ 700.

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The Johnson County Library, Kan. will soon move forward on the installation of RFID equipment and adding tags to all of the books and audiovisual materials at the Corinth Library.

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The Buffalo & Erie County Public Library, New York has started using a self-checkout system that makes use of RFID technology, according to a local news report. In the past, if patrons wanted to check out a book or CD, they had to wait for a librarian to do it for them.

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Bibliotheca announced it is working with the Ottawa Public Library (OPL), and will soon begin converting its entire collection of 2.3 million items from bar code to RFID, spanning across 33 branches and two bookmobiles.

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