Journal Apps

Guus van den Brekel presented an excellent comparison of four journal apps which the university of Groningen evaluated as a way to help academics keep up to date with their literature. How do your users want to read journals? Only in response to a concrete query, doing a database search? Or do they also browse tables of content? And how often do they do the latter – do they rather use RSS feeds from selected journals, or do they browse their favourite journals on a Friday afternoon?

All four apps come from fairly small, innovative companies, not from the big library software providers or publishers. They are:

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The app that scored highest in the Groningen evaluation against a set of criteria and attracted a substantial amount of additional usage of the journals, was Browzine. I was glad to hear of this outcome: at Bern university we are currently trialling Browzine, too!

Here it is: the EAHIL 2014 conference in Rome!

Opening ceremony  of the EAHIL 2014 conference at the Bibliotheca Nazionale Centrale, Rome
Opening ceremony

At last, I’m sitting in the lecture theatre of the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale in Rome in the opening ceremony of EAHIL 2014. Browsing some of the posters as they were being put up in the foyer already brought me some new insights that I’ll have to build into my own work from now on. I really look forward to the all the things I’ll learn in the next three days!