Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Part 1 Best practice for the use of mobile technologies in libraries
- 1 Design and testing of mobile library websites: best practices in creating mobile library applications
- 2 Mobile information literacy for libraries: a case study on requirements for an effective information literacy programme
- 3 Mapping and library services at UOC: a preliminary case study for BPC and UOC
- 4 Library tour evolution (analogue→digital→mobile)
- 5 A manifesto for mobile: developing a shared mobile resource checklist
- 6 M-libraries user services: a survey of the world's leading database publishers for mobile devices
- 7 Assessing students' perceptions of ease of use and satisfaction with mobile library websites: a private university perspective in Bangladesh
- 8 Web v. native applications: best practices and considerations in the development and design of web applications
- Part 2 Challenges and strategies involved in embracing mobile innovation for libraries
- Part 3 Mobile technologies enhancing information access and pursuing the Millennium Development Goals
- Part 4 The impact of mobile technologies on libraries of the future
- Conclusion
- Index
5 - A manifesto for mobile: developing a shared mobile resource checklist
from Part 1 - Best practice for the use of mobile technologies in libraries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 June 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Part 1 Best practice for the use of mobile technologies in libraries
- 1 Design and testing of mobile library websites: best practices in creating mobile library applications
- 2 Mobile information literacy for libraries: a case study on requirements for an effective information literacy programme
- 3 Mapping and library services at UOC: a preliminary case study for BPC and UOC
- 4 Library tour evolution (analogue→digital→mobile)
- 5 A manifesto for mobile: developing a shared mobile resource checklist
- 6 M-libraries user services: a survey of the world's leading database publishers for mobile devices
- 7 Assessing students' perceptions of ease of use and satisfaction with mobile library websites: a private university perspective in Bangladesh
- 8 Web v. native applications: best practices and considerations in the development and design of web applications
- Part 2 Challenges and strategies involved in embracing mobile innovation for libraries
- Part 3 Mobile technologies enhancing information access and pursuing the Millennium Development Goals
- Part 4 The impact of mobile technologies on libraries of the future
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Introduction – a disruptive technology
At the time of publication, by many metrics, the use of mobile devices is expected to exceed that of desktop platforms (Farago, 2012). This massive growth of mobile devices has sparked among publishers a perception that there is community demand for mobile apps and, for the most part, publishers have provided a timely, wide and varied response to this perceived demand. The technological solutions buried in their responses however, threaten to disrupt the current academic models of use and JISC (2014) (the UK's academic network which provides central licensing for the UK academic community, a high speed Janet6 network and RandD in library technology) is at the forefront of addressing the issues raised by this shift. Added to this disruption is the issue of whether the academic community does actually have the appetite for apps which the general public would seem to enjoy.
JISC's concern is natural, as the way in which mobile resources threaten to break the existing models for discovery and research pedagogy, access and authentication, application and content usability and even current licensing impacts many areas of JISC involvement in the sector. Added to that threat is the continuing evolution of mobile devices themselves, as the concept of wearable technology has moved from ‘in five years’ time’ to today's cutting edge (Johnson et al., 2013).
Engagement
A series of workshops (Eventbrite, 2013) was held by JISC in late 2013, involving over 30 separate publishers and 40 different academic institutions, in order to engage with in order to bring those two communities together, to shine a light on some of the developing changes mobile use has brought and to determine if there was a way ahead to mitigate the problems that they were causing. For a series of events involving both publishers and academic librarians there was perhaps a surprising degree of unanimity in both the problems identified and some of the solutions suggested. The key areas identified were:
Discovery
Resource discovery on mobile devices and apps can be very poor, with app-based access siloing content. Linking to content becomes much more difficult, with direct links often failing and poor log-in interfaces resulting in the user becoming lost in a resource even after following a direct link.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- M-Libraries 5From devices to people, pp. 43 - 48Publisher: FacetPrint publication year: 2015