I have always thought "Roving Reference" was somewhat obtrusive (as a patron, 
in fact the public library in charlotte tried such a trial a few years ago: it 
didn't work very well). I think the whole RFID/NFC thing could work well. A 
common dream is the ablity to check out books simply by walking out, but it 
doesn't scale well (technical and physical limitations). What if, when you had 
your watch on, it could act as an NFC/RFID reader to add books to a cart and 
then an iBeacon- type thing could detect you leaving with your Smartphone to 
check out the books in your virtual cart as you left. But I don't think the 
uptake in smart watches will be as strong as some are prediciting, for several 
people I know the WOW factor wore off quickly. For now *I* am happy with my 
Timex IronMan, which has done a really great job at telling time for the last 5 
years. Maybe there might be a use in loaning out the watches at the library 
entry to permit the functionality we want (of course a lower!
  cost device). 
Just my $.02
//Riley

--
Riley Childs
Senior
Charlotte United Christian Academy
IT Services Administrator
Library Services Administrator
web: rileychilds.net
twitter: @RowdyChildren
cell: +1 (704) 497-2086
office: +1 (704) 537-0331 x101
lync: rchi...@cucawarriors.com (select external contact)

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cornel 
Darden Jr
Sent: Tuesday, September 9, 2014 7:52 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Library Services on Small Devices (like Watches): 
Discuss

Hello,

At this point in my career I'm totally sold on the idea of getting rid of the 
reference desk and iRoving. At the libraries I've worked at(4 community 
colleges) iRoving was very suitable, however I think that every library is 
different. 

One of the issues we've found with a complete iRoving solution to reference is: 
"where is the librarian." With convergence, mapping and geolocation, and 
devices like a smart watch; This becomes more possible. 

I could also imagine using it as a library card and for self-check out via a 
library app. The Augmented reality possibilities along with some possibilities 
in conjunction with a 3D printer comes to mind. 

I like the idea of shelf reading and pushing call numbers too. The phone seems 
to be getting pushed to its holder, pocket, or purse; and serving as the 
processing hub for wearables. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 9, 2014, at 2:55 PM, McDonald, Stephen <steve.mcdon...@tufts.edu> 
> wrote:
> 
> Interesting question.
> 
> What if future devices could interact with local wireless systems to 
> questions relevant to the local services, which can respond to questions like 
> Siri, such as:
> 
> "Where is the bathroom?"
> "I want a librarian"
> "Where are books on metaphysics?"
> "Is a study room available?"
> "When does the library close?"
> 
> The device checks with local servers to see whether the question can be 
> answered locally, before checking more globally.
> 
>                    Steve McDonald
>                    steve.mcdon...@tufts.edu

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