Archive for the ‘Wireless Web and Search’ Category

U.S. Postal Service Goes Live With Mobile Site

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

From the Announcement:

It’s a Post Office on your phone. Customer convenience and product access are the focus of expanding the most popular online services onto web-enabled mobile devices.

Some of the most popular functions currently available on usps.com are now available on cell phones and other mobile devices. The new features include Track & Confirm, Post Office locator, and the most popular application, ZIP Code lookup.

[Snip]

The Postal Service is also designing applications for “smartphones” and other mobile devices like the Apple iPhone, BlackBerry and iPod Touch which take advantage of additional capabilities, such as GPS.

Access the U.S. Postal Service Mobile Site at: http://m.usps.com

Source: USPS
Hat Tip: P.W.

New European Project Provides Secure, Official Documents Over the Phone

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

From an Article

Software developed by European researchers allows citizens and local governments to exchange official documents over mobile phones. The software could help usher in the era of mobile government services and put an end to the tedium of queuing to collect official documents.

With the increased flow of workers and trade across the EU’s Member States, collecting the necessary documents to meet government requirements has become part of the rite of passage for many citizens.

Registered post is often the only means of securely sending documents between local, regional and national governmental bodies in different countries. It is expensive and time consuming. Often, citizens have to line up for hours at local offices just to collect the required forms, then line up again to submit them, and wait for the process to be completed.

[Snip]

The software was designed to operate on existing public administrative networks and according to global standards for mobile web services. The software is open source, allowing it to be used freely by anyone who wants to adapt it for their specific needs.

Hoepner says the SWEB system is now available to other municipalities who want to use it for transmitting documents to citizens and businesses. SWEB could help enable governments to improve their administrative processes and their ability to respond to requests for documents across borders.

Access the Complete Story

Source: ICT Results

Lecture: Infectious Disease in the Age of Google

Friday, October 16th, 2009

If you live in the DC area or will be visiting next Thursday (October 22nd), here’s a lecture you might want to attend. It takes place at the Koshland Science Museum and runs from 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM. and costs $7/$5 for students. The Koshland Science Museum is part of the National Academy of Science. We’re working to find out if the lecture will be recorded and made available online.

Although Google is in the title of the event, no one from the company will be offering a presentation. If nothing else, it shows the power of the Google name to grab the attention of people. Smart marketing.

It sounds like a fascinating 90 minutes.

From the Announcement:

The H1N1 virus is circling the globe as the newest pandemic. Before H1N1, people were concerned about SARS and avian influenza. Have you ever wondered how close these diseases are to your neighborhood right now or how health officials are tracking these diseases in remote areas of the globe? Join Amy Sonricker from HealthMap and Pamela Johnson, Co-Founder and Chief Health Officer at Voxiva, for a hands-on exploration of how computers, the internet, and phones are providing the new hi-tech and low cost tools of the future to track and prevent infectious disease outbreaks. Before you begin containing a global outbreak, you need to know where the outbreak is or could be occurring. Come meet a scientist and an entrepreneur who are using 21st century tools to predict and track emerging diseases around the world. Hear about the challenges they face and the impacts they have made or hope to make.

If you can’t attend, make sure to take a look at the resources/companies who will have speakers at the lecture.

1) HealthMap
An amazing resource that tracks, maps, and provides news about disease outbreaks around the world. Be ready to spend some time here.

2) Voxiva
Interactive mobile health information delivered over a mobile phone. The service is sold to health organizations, governments, etc. However, they do offer a few demos that utilize the text message (SMS) technology Voxiva offers. Head to this page, where you can schedule a time to take medicine or calculate your body mass index.

Conference Info: The Handheld Librarian Online Conference 2010

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

If you’re interested in the mobile web and how it can be used in a library or information center setting, this online conference is for you.

The 2010 online conference will take place on February 17-18, 2010. This page has all the details and the call for proposals which are due by November 15, 2009.

This is the second Handheld Librarian Conference. The first conference took place last summer on July 30, 2009.

If you’re interested in attending and/or presenting you might want to get an idea about the types of presentation that make-up the conference. You can take a look at the titles, brief descriptions, and the name/affiliation of the presenter from the first conference on this page.

We’re big believers and users of the mobile web hear at ResourceShelf and hope to attend the conference.

Source: Handheld Librarian Online Conference

The Mobile Researcher: McGraw-Hill Professional Business Books Become iPhone Ready, Over 600 Titles Will Be Available by End of ‘09

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

From the Announcement:

McGraw-Hill Professional, the world’s preeminent business publisher of print and electronic content, is partnering with ScrollMotion, a leading developer of original iPhone applications, to offer e-books as applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch. ScrollMotion is the creator of the Iceberg Reader, an e-Book reader for the iPhone, which provides interactive functionality around content, including search functions, email sharing, multimedia, and more.

The first McGraw-Hill titles are now available on the iTunes Apps Store. This launch list of acclaimed e-Books covers must-have information for all aspects of business, including career development, management, innovation, entrepreneurship, communication, finance, investing, and more, designed to help consumers make better informed business and financial decisions. The first group of titles includes two recent best-sellers, How to Make Money in Stocks by William J. O’Neil and Leadership in the Era of Economic Uncertainty by Ram Charan.

More than 600 fully interactive McGraw-Hill titles will be added to this collection throughout the rest of 2009. E-books will be added on a rolling basis as new titles publish, and will cover other areas, including Medical, Engineering, Computing, Education, and more.

Source: McGraw-Hill (via PR Newswire)

Free! Live Concert Recordings on Your Computer and Now Your iPhone

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

From the Article:

Wolfgang’s Vault is an online archive containing hundreds of high-quality concert recordings, mostly from big classic-rock artists like The Who and U2, but with a few newer artists, such as The Walkmen, thrown in as well. (Here’s a complete list of performers whose recordings are available on the service.) Last month, Wolfgang released an updated version of its much-lauded free iPhone application, Concert Vault, which gives you access to these amazing shows directly from your iPhone or iPod Touch.

Access Wolfgang’s Vault

Access Concert Vault App for iPhone and iTouch (It’s a Free App)

Source: News.com

See Also: Another Place to Access Free Concerts is the Live Music Archive from the Internet Archive

The Mobile Researcher: University of Utah Researchers Release iPhone/iTouch App to Help Teach Human Anatomy

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Wired Campus reports that there is a new iPhone/iTouch app that can help teach human anatomy.

From the Article:

Researchers at the University of Utah have created new iPhone applications that help people study anatomy and medicine.

One of the applications, called AnatomyLab, allows students to view a body in different stages of dissection. Researchers dissected a cadaver and photographed it at 40 different stages of the process.

“It’s aimed at students who want to learn anatomy,” Mark Nielsen, a biology professor, said in a statement. “There’s no substitute for real dissection, but a lot of students in the undergraduate world don’t have access to cadavers in anatomy lab. So we tried to provide them with a realistic lab setting on their phone.”

The application costs $9.99. Here’s a direct link to the AnatomyLab in the iTunes App Store. AnatomyLab is one of several anatomy apps available.

Source: Wired Campus

Online Maps + Crowdsourcing: Just How Good is Your Cell Signal?

Monday, October 12th, 2009

From the Article:

Until now, cell phone users have had no detailed and impartial way to assess and compare which network offers the best data and voice service where they use their phones.

Root Wireless Inc., a Bellevue, Wash., startup, aims to change that. Root’s colorful online map, which debuted last week on CNET.com and is currently usable only by consumers living in the eight U.S. markets analyzed so far, shows voice and data signal strength for each of the four major U.S. carriers. An intriguing plan calls for building out map coverage through 200,000 volunteers nationwide, all armed with a data-gathering app on their smartphones.

[Snip]

Initially, the Root map is accessible only through CNET.com, as part of its library of cell phone reviews. CNET isn’t promoting the map, but it’s available by clicking “check coverage” directly under the reviewed phone’s name. Checking it out is difficult, because it is currently available only within selected cell-phone reviews, and only to CNET visitors in the eight markets — Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, Orange County, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C. — where Root has done its own mapping.

Another 12 [metro] markets are slated to be mapped by year-end: Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Denver, Houston, Miami/Ft. Lauderdale, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Diego, St. Louis and Tampa/St. Petersburg.

Source: MSNBC

The map provides data for AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless. It’s easy to move from one provider to another.

To access the map which is a beta release (remember only eight markets are currently available) head to the cell phone review section of CNET and select a smartphone. ) Smartphones are the only phones that will trigger a map link during the beta period. We’re selecting the iPhone 3GS 32GB (in white) from AT&T. Finally, look in the right hand column below the first two boxes for the clickable link, “Check your coverage area.” You should now be viewing a map. The default region on the map is Metro Seattle but simply enter a street address and/or Zip Code for one of the available metro areas and the map will change to that location. At the bottom of the map you can learn more about data collection and methodology and report descriptions.

The MSNBC article also points out that when the beta period is over (sometime in January) you’ll be able to access maps for all phones.

Finally, if you’re interested in helping Root Wireless crowd source other areas, this page is where you register.

Access the Complete MSNBC Article

Considerations Around Wireless Net Neutrality: The Few Vs. the Many

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Considerations Around Wireless Net Neutrality: The Few Vs. the Many

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski laid out his priorities for the wireless industry at the CTIA IT event last Wednesday. He wants to:

* Bring more spectrum to market to handle rapidly increasing demand for wireless data
* Remove red tape to allow wireless carriers to expand networks faster
* Conduct the regulatory process at the FCC more openly and on a fact-based, data-driven basis
* Codify and enforce net neutrality with special considerations to wireless

I am sure the wireless industry is welcoming the first three priorities of the new Chairman. They represent a welcome and overdue recognition of the situation we are in – more than 270 million American wireless subscribers and more than 42 million of them using smartphones to access the Internet. While the discussion continues about the need for the codification of net neutrality for wireless, it is very encouraging that Chairman Genachowski has recognized that wireless networks deserve special consideration.

Source: Nielsen Wire

See previous:
+ FCC to Propose ‘Net Neutrality’ Rules

The Mobile Researcher: AIP (American Institute of Physics) Releases New iPhone/iTouch App

Friday, October 9th, 2009

The name of the new iPhone/iTouch app is iResearch.

It is a free download but of course you need a AIP subscription (either individual or institutional) or a pay-per-view account to get to the full text content.

From the Announcement:

iResearch was developed to provide physicists, engineers, scientists, and students, with mobile access to valuable physics journal content. Users may access iResearch via the Apple iTunes store to download the application for version 3.0 and higher.

[Snip]

In addition to readily accessing AIP content through a Wi-Fi network or cellular connection, iResearch enables users to optionally save files in PDF format on their iPhone or iPod touch for offline viewing.

[Snip]

The journals available in the iResearch application include: Applied Physics Letters, Biomicrofluidics, Chaos, Journal of Applied Physics, The Journal of Chemical Physics, Journal of Mathematical Physics, Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data, Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, Low Temperature Physics, Physics of Fluids, Physics of Plasmas, and Review of Scientific Instruments.

Here’s a direct link to the iResearch app via the iTunes Store.

See Also: This is Not AIP’s First Mobile Product/Service
In August of 2009, AIP Began Offering a Mobile Friendly Version of the Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy (JRSE).
You Don’t Need an iPhone/iTouch to access this journal. It’s Accessible Using Any Mobile Web Browser.

Source: AIP

See Also: Peter Jacso’s Review of the Scitation Database from AIP
We linked to it on Thursday, October 8, 2009.

Hat Tip: Gerry M.

FuelEconomy.gov Updated With Mileage Estimates for 2010 Autos; Service Also Offers Mobile Site

Monday, October 5th, 2009

The FuelEconomy.gov web site now offers mileage estimates for 2010 cars. You can find estimates for 2010 here. Other years accessible here.

FuelEconomy.gov also provides a mobile version of their site at: fueleconomy.gov/m. The mobile site provides:

+ Fuel economy ratings for all cars and light trucks sold in the U.S. back to model year 1985
+ Annual fuel cost estimates
+ Annual petroleum use (barrels of domestic and imported petroleum)
+ Carbon footprint (tons of carbon dioxide emitted annually)

Source: U.S. Department of Energy / EPA

Getting to Know the “Vook” (aka Hybrid Book)

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

We’re looking at a new form of media (assuming it catches on) that librarians will likely have to catalog. We will catalog as a book? A Video? Audio? Or perhaps we will have to come up with specific cataloging rules for hybrid books.

From the Article:

…in the age of the iPhone, Kindle and YouTube, the notion of the book is becoming increasingly elastic as publishers mash together text, video and Web features in a scramble to keep readers interested in an archaic form of entertainment.

On Thursday, for instance, Simon & Schuster, the publisher of Ernest Hemingway and Stephen King, is working with a multimedia partner to release four “vooks,” which intersperse videos throughout electronic text that can be read — and viewed — online or on an iPhone or iPod Touch.

[Snip]

The most obvious way technology has changed the literary world is with electronic books. Over the past year devices like Amazon’s Kindle and Sony’s Reader have gained in popularity. But the digital editions displayed on these devices remain largely faithful to the traditional idea of a book by using words — and occasional pictures — to tell a story or explain a subject.

The new hybrids add much more. In one of the Simon & Schuster vooks, a fitness and diet title, readers can click on videos that show them how to perform the exercises. A beauty book contains videos that demonstrate how to make homemade skin-care potions.

“Everybody is trying to think about how books and information will best be put together in the 21st century,” said Judith Curr, publisher of Atria Books, the Simon & Schuster imprint that is releasing the electronic editions in partnership with Vook, a multimedia company. She added, “You can’t just be linear anymore with your text.”

In some cases, social-networking technologies enable conversations among readers that will influence how books are written.

[Snip]

Some authors believe the new technologies can enrich books. For his history of street songs in 18th-century France, Robert Darnton, director of the Harvard University Library, will include links to recordings of the actual tunes.

But Mr. Darnton, author of “The Case for Books: Past, Present and Future,” warned that reading itself was changing, and not necessarily for the better. “I think we can see enough already to worry about the loss of a certain kind of sustained reading,” he said.

Source: NY Times
Hat Tip: G.M.

Mobile Web Usage Keeps Growing and Growing

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

From a Blog Post:

Web visitors using a mobile device increased 34 percent year-over-year, from 42.5 million mobile Web visitors in July 2008, to 56.9 million in July 2009 according to The Nielsen Company. [Our emphasis] Overall, year-over-year growth among the 13-17 and 65+ age groups outpaced the growth of the total mobile Web audience, with a youth increase of 45 percent and seniors surging upwards 67 percent in July. While men continue to make up a larger portion of mobile Web users versus women, comprising 53 percent of the audience in July, the growth of female visitors outpaced the growth of male visitors during the month, with women increasing 43 percent YOY as compared to a 26 percent growth among men.

The blog post contains several tables and charts:

+ Mobile Web Audience Profile
+ Top 10 Mobile Web Sites Among Women Ranked by Audience Composition % in July 2009, U.S.
+ Top 10 Mobile Web Sites Among Men Ranked by Audience Composition % in July 2009, U.S.
+ Top 10 Mobile Media Usage Among Teens

Source: nielsenwire

Complete Pay-Per-View Movies Now Available on Mobile Phones

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

From a Blog Post

The summer flick “Transformers 2,” most agreed, was terrible. So naturally, one wonders: how much better would the movie be playing on the 2.6-inch screen of a mobile phone?

On Tuesday, mSpot, a five-year-old mobile entertainment company based in Palo Alto, Calif., will resolve that pressing question with a new service making full-length feature movies available on demand to 40 million cellphone subscribers. Owners of 30 different high-end phones, including the iPhone, Palm Pre, BlackBerry Tour and Storm, on all four wireless carriers, will now be able to enter m.mSpot.com into their phone browser for the pleasure of streaming what the company promises will be an expanding roster of films.

The company says it has signed deals with Paramount Studios, Universal Pictures and the Weinstein Company. It also says it is in talks with the other major studios. Movies will be available a few weeks after they become available on DVD, just as the pay-per-view movies are.

The rental charge is $4.99 per film. The amount of time you have to view the film varies by film and studio. At the present time, the service is only available in the U.S.

We wonder when services that offer downloadable digital movies to library patrons will begin doing the same thing. It was just a few weeks ago when nwe posted the Overdrive will begin offering over the air downloads of digital content with an iPhone app is in the works.

Source: Bits Blog (NY Times)

Mobile Web: A Guide to Text-Message (SMS) Marketing

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Although this New York Times article focuses on small businesses, we think that some of these ideas could also be applied to a library/info center.

The article offers a primer about how to use text messaging (SMS) as marketing tool.

Sections of the article include:

1. Don’t even think about doing it the illegal way.
2. You basically have three (legitimate) options
3. Text marketing can be supported by traditional marketing.
4. It is better to give than to receive.
5. Don’t waste your time with one-offs.
6. Show restraint (and don’t get too cute).

On the second page of the article you’ll also find several quick tips and a list of suggested reading/viewing

Access the Full Text Article

Source: New York Times

See Also: Want Responses? Try SMS-Based Calls to Action (9/21)

See Also: The Library of Congress is Used Text Messaging (SMS) to Promote and Disseminate Info About the 2009 National Book Festival

Mobile Web: CDC Launches Text Messaging Pilot, H1N1 and Other Health News via SMS

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

The CDC mobile site at http://m.cdc.gov has been around since early this year.

Now the CDC has launched a text messaging (SMS) pilot program.

By texting the word HEALTH to 87000 you’ll begin receiving updates on a variety of health topics including the H1N1 virus.

The service from the CDC is free but remember standard text messaging rates apply. You can expect up to three messages a week until the pilot program ends the first week of December.

To opt-out of the service all you need to do is reply HEALTH QUIT.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Hat Tip: P.W.

More Libraries Begin Offering Text-A-Librarian Services

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

We’re posting about new libraries several times a week.

+ The Moline Public Library debuts Text a Librarian Service (via Quad Cities Online)

To send a question to the library, text 66746 and start your question with askmpl. For example, askmpl do you have a copy of Twilight?

+ Information at library patrons’ fingertips in pilot text program (via OregonLive)

The pilot project, called “My Info Quest,” enables patrons to send a text message to a county librarian, who will text an expert answer back to the patron within 10 minutes during hours of service. Text questions to 309-222-7740 with the code WCC in front.

+ Text-A-Librarian sends students answers (San Jose State)

Science Librarian Rob Bruce said the library was exploring new territory.

“We’re providing another access point for students to communicate with us,” Bruce said.

Marci Hunsaker, the co-unit head of reference at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library, said the library has been pursuing different ways to communicate with students.

“We’ve been looking at a lot of reference type ways that students and others can access some help at the library,” Hunsaker said.

A Spartan Daily test found that questions were generally answered within 10 to 20 minutes during operating hours while one of the three questions sent did not receive a response.

See Also: Maryland University Begins Text a Librarian Service
This post includes a list of libraries participating in the InfoQuest program.

Report: Wireless Web: Mobile for Museums

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

We think some of this could also apply to libraries.

From the Summary:

For many years, art museums have been at the forefront of offering their visitors learning experiences that extend beyond traditional exhibit labels with gallery kiosks and audio guides. More recently, art museums continue leading the way by adding cell phone tours, podcasts, and platform-specific applications in an effort to capitalize on the commonly-owned portable devices—iPods, MP3 players, Blackberries, cell phones—that visitors already carry in their pockets. Museum professionals see great potential in reaching new audiences and pleasing old ones by providing content and social interaction via mobile devices. The biggest challenge is that many museums do not quite know where to begin when working with a small budget and small staff with limited technical knowledge. This site addresses those needs by proving a brief overview of what is being done in the mobile museum world and offers suggestions based on this research on how to economically provide mobile users with a positive experience with your museum.

Findings
+ Overview
+ Assessment of the Field
+ Development Recommendations
+ Implementation and Prototypes
++ Omeka Plugins for Mobiles
++ Sites Optimized for Mobiles
+++ Native Cross-Platform Applications
+ Resources

If you’re a Zotero user (a favorite web research tool), you can also access an annotated bibliography

Source: Center for History and New Media
Hat Tip: Mobile Libraries

Want Responses? Try SMS-Based Calls to Action

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Perhaps SMS is a way to rally and/or promote/provoke the library to users and potential users?

From the Article:

SMS may lack sizzle, but it can deliver the goods if provoking your audience to action is the goal, as Chicago’s Shedd Aquarium recently discovered from its summer test campaigns.

To herd visitors to its new Fantasea aquatic show, Shedd Aquarium put a couple of direct-response tactics to the test to see if consumers preferred SMS or web-based calls to action.

[Snip]

The SMS call to action generated 325% more entries than the web-based call-to-action, making up 52% of the total entries, though it ran in only 25% of the ads.

[Snip]

To Shedd’s assistant marketing director, Jay Geneske, the results show that the “phone is always with you, it’s nearby and immediate,” even when you’re watching TV. Shedd also ran a one-day print campaign in a local paper with a text call-to-action, yielding the highest or near highest number of responses for a single-day print piece, Mr. Geneske said.

[Snip]

More than 90% of U.S. handsets are SMS-capable, with the number of text messages starting to outpace voice calls in 2007, according to Nielsen.

Source: AdAge

Real-Time Traffic Reporting, on Time

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

From the Article:

With the introduction this year of applications that turn cellphones into GPS road monitors, traffic alerts may finally begin to work as advertised as more people transmit data into the system.

[Snip]

Automated road information used to come only from a few thousand sensors on major highways. Then, to increase the flow of information, traffic reporting companies like Inrix and Traffic.com received data from commercial fleet vehicles and outfitted with two-way transmitters. But those vehicles traveled only major roads and tended to avoid rush hour. “Generally, commercial fleets attempt to avoid traffic,” said Howard Hayes, a vice president at Navteq, which owns Traffic.com.Traffic reports coming in at 2 a.m. did little to help commuters and holiday travelers, he said.

[Snip]

People are signing up for the free apps from Waze, Aha Mobile, Traffic.com, Inrix and Google traffic, whose applications use GPS tracking to turn cellphones into traffic reporting devices. In return, drivers get free traffic reports.

Source: New York Times