Subject: Computer systems
In response to Mark Ritchie's query: I feel that a paperless system is a non sequitur. The more we automate operations, an equal or greater amount of paper is created elsewhere in the system. Is this Murphy's law? As some of you know, inventory control is something I have spoken about here in the past. At all the institutions I have worked at, knowing what entered the shop, where an item is if it did enter the shop, and when an item left the shop, are mysteries. Mysteries because of an ineffective inventory control system, assuming one existed at all. It is a challenge to track the thousands of items which come through any of our general collections treatment units in a quick and easy and foolproof manner. My automation wishlist, which I hope to get working on soon, includes inventory control of materials in the lab. I want to be able to scan the barcodes of materials coming into the lab into a Mac database which will create an item record for each piece, the first piece of information being the barcode. (We will have a bar code reader for our Mac to facilitate this operation.)(We haven't decided on which database yet. Any of you have a personal favorite which will do the job I describe below?) I want to be able to link our database with the online catalog or the online circulation system, whichever is appropriate. I want our little machine to tell the library's big machine to look for a particular barcode in its files. Then, for each barcode matched, I want to copy certain information from the big machine's item record, eg, author, title, call number, and then to send this information back to our little machine (Mac). The database program will then dump the information about each bar code into the proper fields within the item record. The program will also "stamp" each item record with the date the item was received in the lab. All the fields within our database should be indexable and searchable. Then the item will be treated in the lab. We could create a subsystem in the inventory control database which will track the item through the lab. In our lab the item will be only on a particular shelf in the holding area awaiting repair or at the bench of one of the conservation technicians, students, or volunteers. After treatment the item will be discharged on both our automated circ system as well as our Mac database. A student will do the discharging and inputting. The information input into the database could include, among many other things, date treatment was completed, technician completing the treatment, and treatment(s) executed on the item, including protective enclosure or commercial binding or routing to brittle books. You can also input information about these treatments based on ARL statistical reporting format (something I want to do). By the way, in order for the inputter to do his/her job, a piece of paper must accompany the piece which provides the appropriate information. This is especially true with items which have not been and may never be barcoded. (I propose dummy barcodes which we use once and throw away or re-use over and over again.) (All the materials/items referred to above, a great many items in fact, are general collections items. Special collections items are tracked manually with a paper system because of the low volume of them entering the lab.) If you provide enough information to the database you can also use it to write weekly, monthly, and yearly production reports for your supervisor, including production stats for individual workers. If you establish shop standards regarding the amount of time it normally takes to execute particular treatments, you can extrapolate about the productivity of each technician and whether retraining is required to bring someone up to speed, or to slow them down if high production is hurting quality. Of course a similar system can be instituted for other units within a preservation office, including a brittle books operation, where the inventory control function is the most important aspect of the database. The production end is difficult to monitor in this case because of the variability or complexity of searching time for individual titles. (Of course, folks will say that treatments cannot be cookie-cuttered into timeframes either, but how the hell are you supposed to track treatment productivity effectively anyway you look at it?) Another of course, is that it would be nice if we could get ad hoc but effective inventory control through our institution's online circ or catalog system(s). But I feel that a stand alone system, linked to the library's mainframe, provides us with the answer we need to effectively track items in our departments as well as slow down the rate of paper we generate to treat materials. Robert J. Milevski Preservation Librarian Princeton University Libraries One Washington Road Princeton, New Jersey 08544 609-258-5591 fax, 609-258-4105 or -5571 *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:40 Distributed: Friday, January 29, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-40-003 ***Received on Monday, 25 January, 1993