American Association of Law Libraries 2010 annual meeting program J-2. This is part one. See co-presenter Jason Eiseman's portion here: http://www.slideshare.net/jeiseman/going-mobile-aall-mobile-apps-presentation.
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Going mobile final-slideshare
1. GOING Meg Kribble
Research Librarian & Outreach Coordinator
MOBILE Harvard Law School Library
http://slideshare.net/mak506
AALL J2 - July 13, 2010 Photo: Public Library of Cincinnati & Hamilton County Book Mobile
4. 32
% of American smartphone owners
who have used the device to access the Internet
Internet, broadband, and cell phone statistics, January 2010
Pew Internet & American Life Project
5. 23
% of cellphone users who go online on a typical day
Internet, broadband, and cell phone statistics, January 2010
Pew Internet & American Life Project
6. 53
% of users between 18 and 29
who have used the internet on a handheld device
Internet, broadband, and cell phone statistics, January 2010
Pew Internet & American Life Project
7. 39
% of college graduates who have
used the internet on a handheld device
Internet, broadband, and cell phone statistics, January 2010
Pew Internet & American Life Project
8. 46
% of lawyers who report
regular Internet use on a PDA/smartphone/Blackberry
2009 Legal Technology Survey Report
American Bar Association
9. 2.3
% of lawyers who report
regular use of mobile device for legal research
2009 Legal Technology Survey Report
American Bar Association
10. an institutional choice
not to pursue mobility
is increasingly untenable
7 Things You Should Know About Mobile IT
Educause
13. App World: 7422 Android Market: 70,000
App Catalog &
Software Store: 8000 App Store: 225,000
How many native apps?
Wikipedia: List of digital distribution platforms for mobile devices
14. GPS Accelerometer
Microphone
Camera & Speaker
What can native apps do?
Photos: @DeathByBokeh, @Sekaino Ai, @dsevilla, @Roadside Guitars on Flickr
22. Specify how you use your mobile device for library- or research-related tasks.
Harvard University Libraries survey of graduate students
23. 23% HOLLIS Catalog
13% Library hours
9% Mobile library website
8% Access to databases
3% Map of stacks
Which library-related tool would you most like to have on your mobile device?
Harvard University Libraries survey of graduate students
32. Evernote iMovie Opera IMDB Sudoku Shazam
GoodReader Legal Stanza Scrabble Solitaire OpenTable
Dictionary
Gale’s GoodReads Angry Koi Pond Plants vs. Traffic Jam
AccessMyLibrary Birds zombies
What apps are law librarians using?
33. FURTHER READING
*
Laurie Bridges, et al. “Making the Case For a Fully Mobile Library Web Site: from Floor
Maps to the Catalog,” Reference Services Review 38.2 (2009): 309-320.
*
Educause, 7 Things You Should Know About...Mobile Apps for Learning, May 2010,
http://bit.ly/deuOby.
*
Educause, 7 Things You Should Know About...Mobile IT, February 2010, http://bit.ly/d053gP.
*
iPhone J.D.: Lawyers Using iPhones, http://www.iphonejd.com.
*
“Libraries and Patrons on the Move: From Bookmobiles to “M” Libraries,” Reference
Services Review 38.1 (2009).
*
Joan K. Lippincott. “A Mobile Future for Academic Libraries,” Reference Services Review
38.2 (2009), 205-213.
*
“M-Libraries,” LibSuccess Wiki, http://libsuccess.org/index.php?title=M-Libraries.
*
Mobile Web Application Best Practices [proposed recommendation], W3C, 2010,
http://www.w3.org/TR/mwabp.
*
Small Surfaces [multi-platform mobile design site], http://www.smallsurfaces.com.
*
USA.gov Mobile Apps, http://apps.usa.gov/.