| ▲ | Lumocra a day ago | |
I am working on a self-hostable borrow store management system: https://github.com/leihbase/leihbase. I am running it in my city for a library of things. We hope to help people abstain from buying things they only need once a year. It includes a reservation system, and an dashboard to manage those reservations in the shop. Currently I'm expanding it with a proper product management interface. | ||
| ▲ | kioleanu a day ago | parent | next [-] | |
What a wonderful project the Leihbar is! My local MakerSpace has something similar, but it’s pretty unofficial, you just have to announce what you’ve taken in a public chat. I’ve often had the problem that I’ve needed a tool and borrowing it from Obi or similar cost more than half the price of a new one so I just bought a variant from Parkside for cheaper or similar price. Keep up the good work! | ||
| ▲ | araes 13 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
Probably work for a lot of normal libraries. Here's a picture of the books we have and a couple of preview pages. You can put yourself on the reserve list. Tell you how long the current borrower, or the current "candidate for borrowing" has had the item, or had the possibility of borrowing. | ||
| ▲ | TZubiri a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |
An interesting twist on this, would be to hold the used item while "paying" for it with a collateral. It would remove the need to have an owner to which the item must return to, allowing it to behave more like a linked list, reducing the amoutn of trips by two. I also think that for taxeable purposes this would work better than buying and selling used items, especially in countries with gross income taxes. In the rest of the cases at least it would reduce the administrative burden to prove that ones net-income or value-add was marginal or negative. | ||