With more than 320,000 items in its collection, including rare legal documents, and a variety of cataloging systems in use, such as paper card catalogs, the Max Planck Institute for European History ...
This article was originally published by RFID Update. June 26, 2006—Item-level tagging specialist TAGSYS today announced that its technology will be deployed at the Shenzhen Library in China, where it ...
For a glimpse of how RFID technology could transform stores, factories and people's everyday lives, you may only need to look as far as your local library. Hundreds of city and college libraries are ...
ASK continues its progress in the provision of low cost RFID labels for library asset management. The company has aligned with Bibliotheca, a European provider of RFID-enabled library solutions, to ...
Libraries have a long history of protecting the privacy rights of their users, which has continued through vast technological change. Following extensive research and deliberation, the San Francisco ...
eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
The expansion of the Crandall Public Library will offer patrons more than additional space. The expanded library will also include radio frequency identification (RFID) technology. The system will ...
Colloquy: Read the transcript of an online discussion about whether libraries’ increasing use of high-tech tags to keep track of books poses a threat to privacy and civil liberties by enabling library ...
I would like to commend The Chronicle for its August 6 article “Talking Tags.” The article dealt in a rational, balanced way with the topic of high-tech labels in library books. However, I would like ...
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