Friday, June 20, 2008

One More Reason To Never Leave the House


The NYT has a happy review of the new Ikan grocery scanner, a home countertop item that scans your empties and maintains an online grocery list for you. When the cupboards are bare simply log in, place your order and wait for your replacement sustenance to knock on your door.Okay, so I love the technology. A consumer-level gizmo that reads barcodes? Yay! A gizmo that reads barcodes and communicates with the interwebs? Super awesome! An "online database of one million products"? Neato!But we don't get outside enough as it is. Not one of us. We're isolated from other humans in ways unfathomable even 20 years ago. We work online, go to school online, shop online, chat online and meet potential dates and spouses online. Look, it's creepy. Internet-dependent living is just creepy. I'm as web-addicted as the next nerd but I refuse to give up my scratch-paper-and-pen grocery list. I won't abandon my twice- or thrice-weekly trip to the neighborhood grocery store. At the store I can smell the birthday cakes being made in the bakery. I can ogle the olive bar, admire the asparagus mountains, fondle the navel oranges until I find just the right succulent few. I can chitchat with the checker, smile at the bagger, experience the actual sights, sounds, smells and sensations of an actual public place. And that's super duper awesome if you ask me.
Visit Barcode Nerds - another great barcode blog

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Applications for Bar Code Technology in Construction

We have a lot of tasks in construction that could benefit from some automation. Perhaps the most tedious of all is the collection and recording of data. That data could be the time someone started work, when they took their breaks and when they quit working, along with the GPS coordinates of where they were on the jobsite each time that data was collected. It could also be the number of nails at the jobsite, along with the GPS coordinates of where they were, at noon on any given day so an order could be placed that would result in more nails where needed by the start of work the next day.

On many job sites those kinds of data collection and entry items either never get collected and entered, or they are a day late and a dollar short. The result is the data is pretty much useless for anything other than reacting to something. Efficiency can go up if we can be proactive and that means getting the data in time to actually do something that prevents a problem. And we all know that in construction we spend way too much time solving problems when we ought to be building things.

So, here's something that will make you want to go out in the parking lot and do handstands. There's no reason today that your lead carpenter couldn't punch the clock using his cell phone. You have a barcode on the wall at the jobsite, he scans it with his barcode scanner, the data, including the GPS coordinates, is time-stamped by the phone, transferred wirelessly to your computer in the office where it is automatically recorded in a time sheet.

Or, your super takes a tour of the site and using her cell phone scans bar codes on certain materials in particular worksite locations. She adds a quantity and presses the send button. The volume of material at that time and at that location is recorded on a data sheet at your computer, and if you have it set up really well those items having quantities that are at a lower level than a predefined threshold are rolled into a master order of materials from all job sites. At 3 pm you push the send button, the materials order goes in, and the materials are at the sites before the beginning of the next workday. There are no "we ran out of" excuses the next day, the job moves forward at amazing speeds, and you are a hero.

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