If you leave a dry book there, it will certainly be unconvincing. So many people will open their books and put notebook paper, pens, cups and even toilet paper, cushions and clothes to occupy seats. This is really the location of the museum, with good intentions.
Many people occupy seats for one day, but the actual use time may only be two hours, and maybe they will brush their mobile phones for an hour during this time.
On the other hand, occupying a seat itself is a waste of public resources. In libraries, especially university libraries, it is a hot topic every year. Readers complain a lot, and the library teacher is also very helpless.
In order to avoid this situation, many libraries have invested a lot of money in the seat selection system. Every reader should choose his seat first, then sit down, walk away for a while and set it up. But when there are not many people, no one likes to use this machine, which makes the machine idle. The problem remains unresolved.
I have some suggestions on how to solve the problem of seat occupation in essence.
In this era of * * * enjoying your bike and charging treasure, can't you * * * enjoy your seat?
If the library is a bus, if there is a seat on it, forget it if there is no seat.
You can't keep your seat when you go home at night, can you?
If someone sits with a schoolbag on his back, you will ask him, is anyone there?
If people are not in the car and things are on the seat, I think you will probably sit confidently?