際際滷shows by User: ebenenglish / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: ebenenglish / Wed, 11 Feb 2015 16:32:56 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: ebenenglish Book Reader Bingo: Which Page-Turner Should I Use? /slideshow/eenglish-bookreader-talkc4l2015/44569972 eenglishbookreader-talkc4l2015-150211163256-conversion-gate02
Presented at Code4Lib 2015 in Portland, OR on February 10, 2015 by Eben English (eenglish [at] bpl.org, Boston Public Library) Another day, another library reinventing the book-viewer wheel. When will the madness end? This talk will explore the current landscape of book-viewer/page-turner applications for digital library systems with an eye towards helping you make the right decision for your project. We'll look at some the major players on the market (such as Internet Archive BookReader, Wellcome Player, Mirador, and WDL-Viewer to name a few) and compare them based on a number of criteria: feature sets, mobile/tablet friendliness, ease of integration, code health, test coverage, "market share" (number of implementers), and other important factors. We'll look at the results of ACTUAL USABILITY TESTS to see what features users REALLY want in a book-viewer, and how each app measures up. We'll also discuss important recent trends (such as the IIIF Presentation API) that have the potential to shape the book-viewer development landscape in the immediate future. Which page-turner applications are best poised to adopt/integrate/leverage these emerging standards? Which will become obsolete? This talk has the answers you need.]]>

Presented at Code4Lib 2015 in Portland, OR on February 10, 2015 by Eben English (eenglish [at] bpl.org, Boston Public Library) Another day, another library reinventing the book-viewer wheel. When will the madness end? This talk will explore the current landscape of book-viewer/page-turner applications for digital library systems with an eye towards helping you make the right decision for your project. We'll look at some the major players on the market (such as Internet Archive BookReader, Wellcome Player, Mirador, and WDL-Viewer to name a few) and compare them based on a number of criteria: feature sets, mobile/tablet friendliness, ease of integration, code health, test coverage, "market share" (number of implementers), and other important factors. We'll look at the results of ACTUAL USABILITY TESTS to see what features users REALLY want in a book-viewer, and how each app measures up. We'll also discuss important recent trends (such as the IIIF Presentation API) that have the potential to shape the book-viewer development landscape in the immediate future. Which page-turner applications are best poised to adopt/integrate/leverage these emerging standards? Which will become obsolete? This talk has the answers you need.]]>
Wed, 11 Feb 2015 16:32:56 GMT /slideshow/eenglish-bookreader-talkc4l2015/44569972 ebenenglish@slideshare.net(ebenenglish) Book Reader Bingo: Which Page-Turner Should I Use? ebenenglish Presented at Code4Lib 2015 in Portland, OR on February 10, 2015 by Eben English (eenglish [at] bpl.org, Boston Public Library) Another day, another library reinventing the book-viewer wheel. When will the madness end? This talk will explore the current landscape of book-viewer/page-turner applications for digital library systems with an eye towards helping you make the right decision for your project. We'll look at some the major players on the market (such as Internet Archive BookReader, Wellcome Player, Mirador, and WDL-Viewer to name a few) and compare them based on a number of criteria: feature sets, mobile/tablet friendliness, ease of integration, code health, test coverage, "market share" (number of implementers), and other important factors. We'll look at the results of ACTUAL USABILITY TESTS to see what features users REALLY want in a book-viewer, and how each app measures up. We'll also discuss important recent trends (such as the IIIF Presentation API) that have the potential to shape the book-viewer development landscape in the immediate future. Which page-turner applications are best poised to adopt/integrate/leverage these emerging standards? Which will become obsolete? This talk has the answers you need. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/eenglishbookreader-talkc4l2015-150211163256-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Presented at Code4Lib 2015 in Portland, OR on February 10, 2015 by Eben English (eenglish [at] bpl.org, Boston Public Library) Another day, another library reinventing the book-viewer wheel. When will the madness end? This talk will explore the current landscape of book-viewer/page-turner applications for digital library systems with an eye towards helping you make the right decision for your project. We&#39;ll look at some the major players on the market (such as Internet Archive BookReader, Wellcome Player, Mirador, and WDL-Viewer to name a few) and compare them based on a number of criteria: feature sets, mobile/tablet friendliness, ease of integration, code health, test coverage, &quot;market share&quot; (number of implementers), and other important factors. We&#39;ll look at the results of ACTUAL USABILITY TESTS to see what features users REALLY want in a book-viewer, and how each app measures up. We&#39;ll also discuss important recent trends (such as the IIIF Presentation API) that have the potential to shape the book-viewer development landscape in the immediate future. Which page-turner applications are best poised to adopt/integrate/leverage these emerging standards? Which will become obsolete? This talk has the answers you need.
Book Reader Bingo: Which Page-Turner Should I Use? from ebenenglish
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