Next Big Trends: A Librarian’s Field Guide to Near Field Communication

Post on 02-Jul-2015

2,088 views 1 download

description

A presentation by Sheli McHugh and Kristen Yarmey at Internet Librarian 2011 in Monterey, California. Near Field Communication (NFC) is a new technology that allows devices such as cell phones to transmit information wirelessly across a small distance. While it has many commercial applications (e.g., using your smartphone as a credit card at the grocery store), NFC could also have future applications for libraries as a new way to link physical materials with digital information. Placing particular attention on cataloging, metadata, and circulation, this presentation will discuss potential strategies for utilizing NFC in libraries, from peer to peer loaning to embedding catalog records in books.

transcript

A Librarian’s Field Guide to

Near Field Communication

Sheli McHugh (@shelitwits) Cataloging & Metadata Librarian, University of Scranton

Kristen Yarmey (@kristenyt) Digital Services Librarian, University of Scranton

What this presentation is not: based in experience

What this presentation is: an introduction

What is NFC? (Near Field Communication)

What is NFC?

A way for devices to transmit and receive

information wirelessly

at close range

How does it work?

Initiator (read/write mode)

Target

How does it work?

Initiator Target (card emulator mode)

How does it work?

Initiator/target (peer-to-peer mode)

Target/initiator (peer-to-peer mode)

Why do we need this? We already have Bluetooth. And WiFi. And QR codes.

Maybe we do need this.

“a game changer”

“the biggest shift in technology since the iPhone”

“from smartphones to to superphones”

How is it being used?

Mobile payment

Now • Google Wallet Coming • ISIS (AT&T, Verizon,

T-Mobile) • Visa Wallet

Rosetta Stone

When is it coming? If ever?

When is it coming?

• Already popular in Asia • Some phones are already NFC enabled • By 2014, 1 in 5 cell phones will be NFC-

enabled (Juniper)

• By 2015, 1 in 2 cell phones will be NFC-enabled (Sy Choudhury, Qualcomm)

Who to watch

What does it mean for us ?

Easy applications

• Mobile library cards • Mobile payment of library fines • Authentication for library computers &

printers • Marketing with smart posters • Gaming (libraries are magic places, after all!)

The importance of place

• Celebrating a neighborhood or campus

A truly mobile collection

• NFC tags on books or media resources could contain: – Bibliographic information – Reviews – Author biography – Link to similar resources – Social media integration – Self check out! – Due date for a checked-out book

A truly mobile collection

• Off-the-shelf self-checkout? – Bibliotecha has a prototype app!

The dark side

• NFC may change the way our patrons interact with information

• Awareness and education

Security and privacy

• Mobile payment – Can be secure than a magnetic strip on a

credit card

• User responsibilities • Vulnerabilities at all levels: phone, app,

OS, tag…

Thank you! www.slideshare.net/kristenyt

Resources

• Security and privacy – FTC December 2010 Staff Report – Collin Mulliner’s NFC security research web

page and NinjaCon presentation – Intrepidus Group webinar “NFC for N00bs”

(Oct 21!) – MasterCard statement on Google Wallet

security