Thanks Jeff, et al-
I recently review the Pacific Northwest National Labs presentation on using RFID tags to track & re-inventory containers.
Now I just need an efficient way to capture the label information prior to applying the tag!
Sincerely,
-Russ
Russell Vernon, Ph.D.
Director
Environmental Health & Safety
University of California, Riverside
900 University Ave
Riverside, CA 92521
www.ehs.ucr.edu
russell.vernon**At_Symbol_Here**ucr.edu
Direct (951) 827-5119
Admin (951) 827-5528
Fax (951) 827-5122
Taking a trip overseas?
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https://ermsp.ucop.edu/uctrip and enter your UC Net ID
From: DCHAS-L Discussion List [mailto:dchas-l**At_Symbol_Here**med.cornell.edu]
On Behalf Of Jeffrey Lewin
Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2015 5:53 AM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Capturing chemical container information via computer
I recently discovered our MSDS-online (sic) account allows us to download a QR reader app that interacts with their database and to print out QR labels for chemicals. While initially excited about the option, implementation appears to
be more difficult:
Note I only spent about 30 minutes working with this so I may have overlooked some things.
Downloading the app from Google Play was simple, login in a breeze and operation relatively straight forward.
The bigger difficulty is on the labeling side. Of course you first have to print out and apply the labels. With thousands of chemicals in our inventory, that will/would be pretty labor intensive.
A bigger issue I had was actually selecting and printing out labels. The label creation tool is set up to print on various Avery labels, a plus. However, from what I could tell it only had QR versions for chemicals in which the (M)SDS
was GHS compliant so if they hadn't updated it yet in their data base, no label. Also, it wasn't very straight forward to select multiple chemicals and print out "batch" labels. Once I figured out how to print out the batch label of all the various bottles
of an individual chemical (for what I thought was a location I selected) it printed out the labels for chemicals in other location I wasn't interested in...I got a bunch of labels for chemistry rather than biology...
On the app side there is some positive to the system.. I was able to scan the QR codes with my phone (I didn't actually attach them to a bottle, just scanned my printout) and it does appear to allow you to quickly manipulate the database.
Of course if the bottle just came with QR codes on them in an open source format we wouldn't have to fool around with printing at all...just scan the code and quickly update the database for location and we'd be all set.
Jeff
On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 2:55 PM, Russell Vernon <russell.vernon**At_Symbol_Here**ucr.edu> wrote:
Dear Learned Ones-.
We are interested in a more efficient & accurate system to read the label on a bottle with a mobile device for chemical inventory.
Our current practice of using people to read the label on the container and type in the data is slow, prone to errors and a waste of human capital.
Are any of you aware of any tool that can be used to read a container label and identify/capture the information?
If you know of a company able and willing to develop such an interface please share that information with me as well.
Sincerely,
-Russ
Russell Vernon, Ph.D.
Director
Environmental Health & Safety
University of California, Riverside
900 University Ave
Riverside, CA 92521
www.ehs.ucr.edu
russell.vernon**At_Symbol_Here**ucr.edu
Direct (951) 827-5119
Admin (951) 827-5528
Fax (951) 827-5122Taking a trip overseas?
Access Location Intelligence: https://ermsp.ucop.edu/uctrip and enter your UC Net ID
--
Jeff Lewin
Departmental Laboratory Supervisor
Biological Sciences
Michigan Technological University
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