Thanks, Terran! Great info.

-----Original Message-----
From: Open-ils-general 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
McCanna, Terran
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2015 1:06 PM
To: Evergreen Discussion Group
Subject: Re: [OPEN-ILS-GENERAL] smartphone apps instead of library card

We also began accepting barcodes on apps about a year and a half ago. This is 
the policy language that the PINES Executive Committee approved:

"Patrons are allowed to present a scannable electronic facsimile of the PINES 
card on a hand-held device. Staff must confirm the patron’s identity by asking 
for a key piece of information from the patron record.  Name, phone number, 
email address, street address, or date of birth would be acceptable. Note that 
if a library’s barcode scanners cannot scan the card number from the hand-held 
device, library staff will type in the card number displayed on the hand-held 
device along with confirmation of the patron’s identity. It is recommended that 
libraries using self-check machines require that the patron input their PIN."

We haven't seen any noticeable increase in the numbers of people claiming that 
they didn't check books out since we began allowing it. 

As we receive feedback from libraries on different scanner models and whether 
they work with phones or not, we update this page:

http://pines.georgialibraries.org/barcode-scanners





Terran McCanna 
PINES Program Manager 
Georgia Public Library Service 
1800 Century Place, Suite 150 
Atlanta, GA 30345 
404-235-7138 
[email protected] 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Holly Brennan" <[email protected]>
To: "Evergreen Discussion Group ([email protected])" 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2015 4:21:30 PM
Subject: [OPEN-ILS-GENERAL] smartphone apps instead of library card

Are any Evergreeners accepting smartphone apps that store card barcodes? 
(CardStar, Keyring, etc) Or I guess I should ask, WHO is doing this?

To keep this Evergreen related, are you using anything in the staff client to 
verify patrons are who their phone says they are? We don't like that anyone can 
type in any card number and have it generate a barcode. There needs to be some 
identification (photo ID? Ask birthdate?). It just dawned on me that any 
library with self-checkout must be dealing with this regardless of whether the 
practice is in the library's policy.

Curious what you've come up with to use, besides asking for an ID, in addition 
to the barcode app. We're dreaming of an Evergreen app that includes something 
like these "loyalty" apps, but specific to our library....

-Holly

Holly Brennan
Library Technology Specialist
Homer Public Library, Alaska

[email protected]
907-235-3180 (main)
907-435-3154 (direct)

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