RFID for Laptop Inventory Tracking?
An anonymous reader asks: "We are in the process of getting new laptops and I was wondering if anyone has used RFID for inventory control of them? Like many places laptops have had a way of going MIA. In an ideal world I would like to be able to get a 'real time' update of where the tags are located. I also would like to know when a RFID tag goes by a fixed location such as a door.
What are people's experience both good and bad with RFID? Is this realistic? Where do I start? Had this been done with open-source?"
Dude, I hardly ever hear "I'd love to get a laptop" without being followed by "My buddy gets them for cheap". They're quite content in receiving X-random-laptop with X-lacking-features. Meanwhile, I blew a nice chunk on an Inspiron 8500 and even after a year I still love the damned thing and use it daily.
Now don't get me wrong, I was once in the dark, having purchased (and quickly resold) a few questionably-obtained mobile computing apparati. I didn't resell for monetary gain, which didn't happen anyways. I resold because I wanted those things out of my life forever, they sucked monkey balls. Sure, for the typical suit who just wants to "read email" and look as rich as the guy sitting next to him, yeah fine, but for a power hacker you want the fastest, most connectable, graphically-superior machine out there. It just so happens that when you blow 2500$ on a toy, you will see no wrong in spending another 100$ or so on security devices to protect your beloved electronic companion. Me, I like how my Bios is modded to phone home during POST. And how everything is passworded to infinity and beyond. And how I never leave it in plain sight unless I'm standing near with a weapon of mass bludgeoning.
Long story short: stolen laptops suck, because good laptops have watchful caring owners.
-Billco, Fnarg.com
RFID is easily foiled (*rimshot*) by any sufficiently massive _OR_ properly positioned hunk of metal. I played with the RF stickers at a video store that was once blessed with my dutiful presence, and soon discovered that they were rendered silent by merely holding an Xacto knife against the little bump in the center of the sticker. The knife would absorb the energy from the RF towers and thus the poor passive tag couldn't sing.
Now it is safe to assume that most of my customers were too retarded to even try the obvious, but I'm equally sure that a select few elite weirdos had perfected this art, or maybe even just lined their travel bag with a few layers of foil/sheetmetal, cuz we sure lost tons of tapes.
-Billco, Fnarg.com
Unless you're using a strong active RFID, you're only going to be able to track a laptop to the door of your place of business. If someone takes it home and "loses" it, there's no good way to keep tabs on it. It could be possible to scan it on the way out the door and take a picture of the person carrying it though, kind of like that store system which takes a picture of someone when they remove an item from the shelf.
It's good to use your head, but not as a battering ram.
My solution was RFID. Then she could walk into an office, "hear" the items in the room, and go about her day. It sure beat any other system I could think of for tracking items (especially when techs, engineers, and managers trade items around the office without letting her know).
The problem? /. They are big and bulky and have a rather limited range (meaning inches, not feet). There was also a question of cost and how efficient it would be place a $1 RFID tag on everything from a server to a mouse.
Primarily size. RFID tags are not available in the "paper-thin" size you hear about on
:wq