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by michael_michael 909 days ago
My local library system has had this for years. I’ve always wondered why it’s not more ubiquitous. You put your stack of books on the counter, and the titles appear on a confirmation screen almost instantaneously. Scan your library card and away you go.
4 comments

A library book is a relatively expensive object (not necessarily the physical book, but the whole cost of having the book at the library). Spending a couple dollars on a durable tag that is permanently attached to the book makes sense.

Retail stores had to wait until people developed much cheaper tags, because each tag only gets used once. These cost a few cents per tag, and are different from the 13.56MHz tags that the library probably uses.

I can buy rfid tags for 10c in bulk on Amazon.
Hm, you're right, even the 13.56 tags have come way down in price. Anyway, I think my point still stands: RFID as a technology used to be more expensive, and used to be at a price point were tracking an asset like a book or a shipping crate through multiple uses made sense but tracking a bottle of milk through a single purchase didn't.
And a cool thing about this is that the tags are reused, probably for as long as the book is available.
My library (in the UK) has this too, but you still have to do one book at a time.
all from RFIDs?