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Erin Flynn, an Orland Park Public Library employee, shows the library's current barcode scanning system used by patrons for checking out books. The library is installing a radio-frequency identification system designed to speed the process for patrons che
Erin Flynn, an Orland Park Public Library employee, shows a tag that will be used in the library's radio-frequency identification system, which is designed to speed the process for patrons checking out material. | Supplied photo.
Oak Lawn Public Library preparing to install radio-frequency identification system to speed process of checking out books, letting patrons bypass a librarian. | Mike Nolan~Sun-Times Media.
Oak Lawn Public Library preparing to install radio-frequency identification system to speed process of checking out books, letting patrons bypass a librarian. | Mike Nolan~Sun-Times Media.
Oak Lawn Public Library preparing to install radio-frequency identification system to speed process of checking out books, letting patrons bypass a librarian. | Mike Nolan~Sun-Times Media.
Marlon King, with DecisionOne, scans books at the Oak Lawn Public Library in preparation for the library's upcoming adoption of radio-frequency identification system to speed process of checking out books, letting patrons bypass a librarian. | Mike Nolan~Sun-Times Media.
Marlon King, with DecisionOne, scans books at the Oak Lawn Public Library in preparation for the library's upcoming adoption of radio-frequency identification system to speed process of checking out books, letting patrons bypass a librarian. | Mike Nolan~Sun-Times Media.
Marlon King’s goal is to finish 400 books an hour. Not reading them, obviously, but affixing sticky tags slightly thicker than a postage stamp to books and other materials at the Oak Lawn Public Library. It’s part of the prep work for the rollout this …