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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Aldrich, Alan W.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ901488
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author Aldrich, Alan W.
author_facet Aldrich, Alan W.
Aldrich, Alan W.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Universities and Libraries Move to the Mobile Web Aldrich, Alan W. Foreign Countries Research Universities Internet Handheld Devices Telecommunications Computer System Design Information Technology Web Sites Computer Mediated Communication Computer Uses in Education Influence of Technology Comparative Analysis Case Studies College Libraries Information Storage Shared Resources and Services Mobility Access to Information The convergence of web-enabled smartphones, the applications designed for smartphone interfaces, and cloud computing is rapidly changing how people interact with each other and with their environments. The commercial sector has taken the lead in creating mobile websites that leverage the capacities of smartphones, and the academic community has begun to follow suit. Given this relatively recent adoption of mobile technology by the academic community, the handful of studies completed examine how people use academic mobile websites or identify what information/services they want to access via the mobile web and tend to focus on one or two institutions rather than a cross-section of mobile websites across multiple institutions. Cross-sectional studies identify the types of services commonly offered while allowing for comparisons between what is offered and what users want or need to access using the mobile web. This article reports a study that examines the mobile websites of large research universities and their libraries in the United States and Canada. The services available on different university and library mobile websites are compared and contrasted with the literature identifying what mobile web users desire. This analysis across multiple mobile websites provides universities and their libraries with an initial benchmark for comparisons with other institutions. (Contains 8 figures, 2 tables and 46 endnotes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ901488
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Universities and Libraries Move to the Mobile Web
Aldrich, Alan W.
Foreign Countries
Research Universities
Internet
Handheld Devices
Telecommunications
Computer System Design
Information Technology
Web Sites
Computer Mediated Communication
Computer Uses in Education
Influence of Technology
Comparative Analysis
Case Studies
College Libraries
Information Storage
Shared Resources and Services
Mobility
Access to Information
Universities and Libraries Move to the Mobile Web Aldrich, Alan W. Foreign Countries Research Universities Internet Handheld Devices Telecommunications Computer System Design Information Technology Web Sites Computer Mediated Communication Computer Uses in Education Influence of Technology Comparative Analysis Case Studies College Libraries Information Storage Shared Resources and Services Mobility Access to Information The convergence of web-enabled smartphones, the applications designed for smartphone interfaces, and cloud computing is rapidly changing how people interact with each other and with their environments. The commercial sector has taken the lead in creating mobile websites that leverage the capacities of smartphones, and the academic community has begun to follow suit. Given this relatively recent adoption of mobile technology by the academic community, the handful of studies completed examine how people use academic mobile websites or identify what information/services they want to access via the mobile web and tend to focus on one or two institutions rather than a cross-section of mobile websites across multiple institutions. Cross-sectional studies identify the types of services commonly offered while allowing for comparisons between what is offered and what users want or need to access using the mobile web. This article reports a study that examines the mobile websites of large research universities and their libraries in the United States and Canada. The services available on different university and library mobile websites are compared and contrasted with the literature identifying what mobile web users desire. This analysis across multiple mobile websites provides universities and their libraries with an initial benchmark for comparisons with other institutions. (Contains 8 figures, 2 tables and 46 endnotes.)
title Universities and Libraries Move to the Mobile Web
topic Foreign Countries
Research Universities
Internet
Handheld Devices
Telecommunications
Computer System Design
Information Technology
Web Sites
Computer Mediated Communication
Computer Uses in Education
Influence of Technology
Comparative Analysis
Case Studies
College Libraries
Information Storage
Shared Resources and Services
Mobility
Access to Information
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ901488