On Wednesday, the company is answering the call, offering biking routes in 150 American cities in Google Maps. Google plans to unveil the service during the National Bike Summit in Washington. The event will be followed by a group ride at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Tex.
Facebook has announced that next month it will be launching location-based services. This is likely in response to the very popular location-based services Gowalla and Foursquare. Location-based features connect the virtual with the physical, through people’s mobile devices. For instance, letting you know who else nearby you is a Facebook friend, or seeing who in your neighborhood is Tweeting.
March 10th, 2010 :: Posted in the web by Aaron Schmidt :: Comment
Here’s one way that our presence on Twitter is helping the library.
Twitter user Tamikalashelle registers a complaint that she couldn’t find some info on our website and has a library question:
A DCPL twitterer (there are a few of us) responds in a pretty much classic “we’re here listening to you on Twitter” way:
This response evidently worked for her. She went from having a gripe with the library and saying negative things to being excited about the library and a vigorously retweeteing our stuff:
I’m not quite sure how to measure the effectiveness of a library’s presence on Twitter but as long as I keep seeing people communicating with the library and helping to amplify our voice it seems worth our time.
Kudos to whoever engaged this patron in conversation. Make yourself known in the comments!
We’ve been doing an excellent job with our twitter account. It is great to provide library information in a way that is convenient for some people, creating some warm & fuzzy connections in the process.
Turns out that an organization is ranking libraries by the number of followers. DCPL ranks 13th out of 172 listed. I’d say with a real campaign to increase followers we could easily get in the top 10.
Not that this is a popularity contest. Really, success should be measured by having meaningful conversations via twitter. We’ve been doing that and I’ll demonstrate it in a forthcoming post. But having more followers might mean the possibility of having more conversations.
January 29th, 2010 :: Posted in hardware by Aaron Schmidt :: Comment
I’ll be honest. My first reaction to the iPad was disappointment. I wanted Apple’s new device to be something other than a really big iPhone/iPod Touch. I was bound to be disappointed because I wanted this device to change the entire way humans and computers interact. After all, aren’t you getting a bit tired of mice and keyboards?
What I didn’t realize is that Apple already made huge progress rethinking all of our computers when they released the iPhone. I knew that the iPhone was a fun and easy to use phone and computing device, but I didn’t imagine a future where many of our computers are iPhone-like in their simplicity.
Even without the “this is the future of computing” angle, the iPad still has some practical implications for libraries. For one, it may increase the popularity of reading books on a screen. Perhaps more importantly, it certainly will make for an excellent roving reference tool. Anyone interested in testing out this theory?
Oops, we did it again! Release date 1-30-2010. Lots of new features. Pretty new face. SUBURB FRIENDLY! – search Fairfax and Montgomery libraries as well!