Unattended Equipment Loan System? 63
captnitro asks: "I run a small media lab for a department at a large public university. We have about 120 faculty and and equal number of graduate students who from time to time need things like digital cameras, video equipment, projectors, EyeOne units, and so on. (While there is a central location on campus for students, faculty and staff to get some of this equipment, we stock a few specialized pieces that our faculty need.) Since I'm out of the office a lot, I'm looking for a clever way of loaning out equipment that doesn't involve me being there and is secure enough that our administrators deem it "theft resistant" enough to implement. I've looked into small safes with PINs, or card readers (all faculty have IDs with magstripes), blah blah blah, but most of these are prohibitively expensive, so I'm thinking of hacking something together myself.. though I have no idea how I'd do that. Any thoughts?" Solutions could range from the clever and mixed tech (cheap locked boxes with combinations sent through encrypted e-mail), through high tech (use of the existing ID cards system) to unlock delivery boxes. If you were going to set up a system like this, how would you do it?
Re:Not possible. (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Not possible. (Score:1)
This is required when someone loses some company property here.
Re:Not possible. (Score:2)
Re:Not possible. (Score:2)
Psychology (Score:5, Interesting)
-I think the best is simply putting whatever solution you have in a highly visible area, like in a commons area. It's rare that you see a car broken into right in front of the entrance to a store, where everyone can see it.
-Lock it up at the end of the night, by putting a cage around it.
-Put a sign up, "This automated rental system generously donated by (whomever gave you a few bucks to implement this)".
-Have a loud alarm that sounds if it is broken into.
-Put up a camera inside, and have one in a separate location facing the person so everyone who uses it can be identified. Or at least a sign saying "This machine under electronic surveillance".
The key here is not to making it technically impossible to steal something, but to strongly discourage it. And to make it more likely to identify someone who does manage to break into it. You know those signs around military areas that say "Use of deadly force authorized"? Do you really think they put them up because they intend to shoot to kill everyone who wanders in there? Absolutely not. Psychology is a very powerful tool- use it however you can.
Re:Psychology (Score:2)
Good point, especially since that's pretty much how "security" works. You make the prospect of doing something "bad" seem scary and dangerous to those who don't know what they're doing. For those who do know what they're doing, you're just hoping the risk:reward ratio will be high enough that they won't bother.
simple solutions are the best (Score:2)
get them to sign an agreement that their department gets billed if they bring it back late, as well.
Re:simple solutions are the best (Score:2)
RTFS! (Score:4, Interesting)
He wants to have the equipment available to people who have authenticated themselves.
If the people abuse it after that, it's a seperate problem.
By your theory, we should secure our boxes by delting all the accounts, since if you have an account a bad person might log in and do something bad to our box!
Re:RTFS! (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, I seriously doubt you're going to get a long-term viable solution that leaves it up to the honour of the people if there is no-one in attendance.
I know that even in corporate offices where you need a swipe-card to get into the cube farm, things will disappear from peoples desks. When your co-workers might steal your laptop, an honour-system for borrowing t
Re:RTFS! (Score:1)
Pay Someone (Score:5, Insightful)
Also remember that any system you implement to check out equipment also has to make it easy to return equipment. This means that automated solutions need to not rest combinations or whatever until the equipment is returned.
Also, if you choose to go with a technology solution, remember that even if it seems expensive, think of the cost of the equipment that could be stolen, or the cost of paying someone to man the desk.
Re:Pay Someone (Score:3, Insightful)
The first was sys admin for the department's computers. The others were the 2-3 students that ran the stockroom (EE, so all the students needed to check out scopes/supplies for their labs).
Even if your department doesn't already have students working in this capacity, if the department you work in has >120 faculty, it should not be difficult to justify a $5/hour student assistant.
For checking things out, it was a simp
Re:Pay Someone (Score:2)
I dunno if it's possible; that job sounds pretty low on the totem pole, so to speak.
RFID tags? (Score:2)
Re:RFID tags? (Score:2)
Q-cat. (Score:4, Insightful)
http://cuecatastrophe.com/mirrors/Default.asp?p
I would do a 3 step process here. I will assume you have mag strip access to rooms on these cards. Should not be to much of a strech to have one set up on a storage door for access. Here you have a access control list for that door and limit your pool of people with access.
Then barcode all the equipment, set up a little web site that allows people to "request" to check out a piece of equipment online. Use the qcat, after getting past the access list for room access at the door, they scan the piece they are checking out. This time stamps the equipment for you as a check out and return. When they return the equipement they scan it again, and this removes it from the webpage as a "checked out" iteam. Thus giving a running list on the website of things that are "in".
Finally, set up a cheap webcam (thinkgeek has for 200 that is ip based with webserver) to write to disk on a computer in anouther room. This is your safty net for "nothing was scanned, but we have billy bob on tape slinking out with the digital camera. Here are the door scan logs from 12:03 am, and here are the logs where he did not scan it out. Also, he did not request this iteam via the web page. Get a ROPE!"
I think this pretty much covers your ass, gives them access to the equipment, and allows for an automated check in, check out, and what is "in stock".
Best of luck.
One way (Score:1)
Re:One way (Score:1)
Low-tech solution (Score:3, Insightful)
Tux2000
Re:Low-tech solution (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Low-tech solution (Score:2)
it can be done (Score:3, Informative)
Parts
1) Magstrip reader (no link) -- used to read the id of someone at the door
2) Computer (no link) -- used to tell who is at the door.
3) Electronic door strike (http://www.audioimpact.net/EDS300_EDS300_ELECTRO
4) Webcam (no link) -- takes pictures of whoever is entering using motion sensing software
Issues -- power outage -- room remains locked. Entrance can be aqquired by using a key.
Issues -- Damanged equipment -- look at who has checked it out last by checking the mag stripe log and the webcam.
Issues -- Damaged equipment -- "Someone before me broke it", make it well aware that they should test it BEFORE they leave the room with it.
Re:it can be done (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not like he mentioned Microsoft.
I personally like the home built approach. Why not have a locked room that can be entered by swiping University ID (these must be in place already in the school). Lockers containing the items to be loaned with magnetic locks line the walls. (Maybe include RFID tags as backup?) Someone out there I am certain can write a simp
Re:it can be done (Score:2)
benefits) Each individual item is checked out
drawback) AV equipment and the medium it uses probably shouldn't have exposure to the electromagnet that would keep it locked into place.
admittly i don't know much about the electromagents that are used in door locking situations. wouldn't a power outage cause them to let go?
Re:it can be done (Score:2)
Most other "magnetic locks" are mixed electromechanical. They use a permanent magnet to hold the door plate, and a 12v solenoid to move the m
Re:it can be done (Score:1)
That sounds like you're picking up a small stringed instrument in the Music Department (not the French Dept.)
Re:it can be done (Score:1)
nice to see someone with a sense of humor here!
have a great day!
Our uni library has this (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Our uni library has this (Score:1)
Solution (Score:4, Funny)
Can you say "library"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Perfect solution (Score:1)
A new printer
A new scanner
A new whiteboard
A new computer
A SCHOLARSHIP?
The world is not here to provide meaningless jobs just because it 'could'. Doesn't anyone see that problem enough in government? Why perpetuate this bloat?
Also, what is one of the main expenses that stores have? EMPLOYEE THEFT! Do you really think that ANYTHING involving a human is 100% secure?
A play in 3 sentences: Hey, here comes that guy I owe $50. Oh, you want this digital cam
Student Workers (Score:4, Insightful)
It's great for us because we're free to work on more involved projects without worrying that Dr. Smith isn't going to get her LaserDisc player on time. Student workers are also neat to have around.. We maintain a very casual, but very efficient, atmosphere in the office.
While what you're doing MAY be possible without human help, I get the feeling that any automated solution will cause you to spend more time babysitting it than doing your job.
Good luck, and don't forget to change the air filters on those projectors!
Depends on social cohesion... (Score:2)
I saw a presentation by Gabriele Wienhausen [ucsd.edu] (provost of Sixth College at UCSD) about their "digital playroom". I couldn't find a page for it, but did find a press release [calit2.net] about Sony donating a bunch of stuff.
Basically it's a room that students need to swipe their ids to enter. Once inside, they've got free access to camcorders, digital cameras, lots of computers, etc. I think it's unattended, and open very long hours (24/7 during finals).
The key is making the students feel like the equipment is their
What about damage? (Score:2)
You still need a human to check stuff in and out and veri
Re:What about damage? (Score:2, Informative)
I think you can do a lot here. I posted ealier about the lockers and the software package. After an item is returned, the poster (or to make you happy a work-study student) would go in and inspect the item, make sure it is in working condition, or track down the last user. He could then update it's status so the next person who takes it out knows t
rfid (Score:1)
Person with swipe card operates the door to the hitech store room with their swipe card. PC records their entry. Person takes piece of gear with an RFID tag in it and swipes card to exit. PC records their exit, and RFID reader records the RFID of whatever gear they just took out.
Yes it's still possible for a second person to get in when someone else opens the door, or someone could
Re:rfid (Score:2)
2. Develop software to track everything
3. ????
4. Loan crap out for free!
Re:rfid (Score:1)
Internal website calendar/appointment system (Score:3, Interesting)
I realize that I haven't given a suggestion on how to NOT be there in person when lending the equipment out, but I'm in line with the other suggestions that you should hire an underling to do it if you can't do it--that's most cost effective.
In my university, the IDs are now smartcards. Assuming that you also have this system, you could possibly use a smartcard reader for access to a secure room (ask the facility staff to do this). A smartcard reader [google.com] on a PC with a barcode reader (to scan a barcode on the equipment, you do use barcodes for inventory management don't you?) could possibly be used to log the actually equipment transaction without you being there, but that's still insecure and takes staff training, yuck.
Airport/train station lockers? (Score:2)
I've looked into small safes with PINs, or card readers (all faculty have IDs with magstripes), blah blah blah, but most of these are prohibitively expensive, so I'm thinking of hacking something together myself.
I have no idea what the cost situation is, but have you looked at the sorts of lockers that are (or were, at least before 11 Sept 2001) common in airports and train stations? Not the "drop a quarter in and take away the key" type, they've been around for 50 years or more. Rather, the ones that
Equipment is too high value (Score:2)
If you were loaning out stuff that was all worth less than a hundred dollars, I'd have something like this: card swipe on the door, camera watching the whole room and another camera for closeups (both record 24/7 to disk), and electronically closeable rings on shelves. To loan the equipment, just swipe yourself in and pick it up. Your card swipe will unlock the equipment you've booked. Show it to the cl
Linux koisk, LDAP (Score:1)
Office Hours (Score:2)
Re:Office Hours (Score:1)
not sure the scale of equipment you are looking at (Score:2)
--you don't get your quarter back until you put the cart into another cart or other spot with available chains... they don't have to be quarters.
Do these devices have kensington slots? run the cable on the kensington slot (or weld some cables on) and issue unique tokens/ke
4 steps: (Score:2)
Here's what I did... (Score:2)
Basically, we needed a way keep track of what employee used what vehicle out of the company car pool at what times (some trusted employees are supposed to have access to the company cars for official business).
I had a safe installed in a dedicated room, inside the office. All employees have RFID and/or swipe cards for access control to the building. There's a seperate card reader that controls access t