It might not be exactly what you are looking for, but there is a product called 
Nomi (pronounced Know Me) that seems pretty cool. They use pings off 
smartphones to measure people coming in, how longs they stay, if they come 
back, etc. 
http://getnomi.com/

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of 
Sandy Moore
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2013 10:14 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Electronic systems for counting visitors?

We just installed two Sensource units for our Special Exhibitions Gallery and 
it was a huge success.  We are currently planning on expanding the units in our 
facility.  
 
 
 






Sandra J. Moore, MBA
Director of I.T. 
 
419.255.8000 ext. 7308
smoore at toledomuseum.org
 
Toledo Museum of Art
PO Box 1013
Toledo, Ohio 43697






>>> On 1/17/2013 at 5:02 PM, in message
<D242BCE81E7DAD408D1F125A1DB5447725DBF2 at WAMEXCHANGE.walters.local>,
James Maza <jmaza at thewalters.org> wrote:

Hi Nina et al -

Don't have any experience with this company, but this sounds like what you are 
looking for ....

http://www.sensourceinc.com/

hope this helps..

Jim 

Jim Maza
Chief Technology Officer, The Walters Art Museum, 600 N. Charles St., 
Baltimore, MD  21201
(P) 410.547.9000 ext 339
jmaza at thewalters.org
http://www.thewalters.org 

Diadem and Dagger: Jewish Silversmiths of Yemen October 27, 2012-January 21, 
2013 Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe October 14-January 
21, 2013 African Presence: Student Response September 15, 2012-February 3, 2013













-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of Nina 
Simon
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2013 4:42 PM
To: Jaki Levy; Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Electronic systems for counting visitors?

Hi Jaki,

We're explicitly NOT interested in requiring sign-in or tickets - these are 
free-flowing events with thousands of people walking in and out of a small 
space. We want to make the events as accessible and open as possible - we just 
want to know how many people attend.

Thanks,
Nina

On Jan 17, 2013, at 1:35 PM, Jaki Levy wrote:

> Hi Nina - I imagine this could be accomplished very easily with some
kind of ticket system / sign-in process. Every visitor that enters needs a 
ticket, even if they don't pay. Is there any way to require a "ticket"
or sign-in of some sort, even if it's virtual / electronic? Buttons? A check 
mark? Virtual check-ins via onsite hardware? iPad checkins? I've done this kind 
of sign-in process for countless volunteer run organizations and it works 
wonders :-)
> 
> - Jaki
> 
> 
> web: http://arrowrootmedia.com
> cell: 646-339-9410
> 
> 
> On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 12:58 PM, Nina Simon <nina at museumtwo.com>
wrote:
> Dear friends in museum geekitude,
> 
> We're looking for a solution for our small museum to count people.
Specifically, we have an increasing number of free days, and we'd really prefer 
for our limited staff and volunteers to spend their time interacting with 
visitors instead of focusing on getting a good count.
That said, we'd like a good count.
> 
> We have three wide entrances and on our busy nights, thousands of
people will stream in. My early investigation has uncovered cheap IR systems 
that don't do well with multiple people walking through the same doorway 
together, or expensive video systems that seem like overkill as they do all 
kinds of non-counting functions. I talked to an engineer friend about us 
hacking together an IR system with two distance sensors for each doorway 
pointing out at an angle to be able to sense two/three people at a time, and we 
might pursue that, but he strongly suggested I first reach out to brilliant 
people in the field and see how you deal with this.
> 
> How do you deal with this?
> 
> Thanks!
> Nina
> 
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