You don't need to manage
your library from a mobile phone — just pick up the most convenient device for that.
Not exact matches
have 24/7 browser - based and
mobile access to
library material information
from a computer, smart
phone or iPad.
There is a city tradition,
from the private tranquil
libraries of stately homes such as North London's 17th - century estate Kenwood House in Hampstead Heath to the British Library's Reading Room in King's Cross — a place where the etiquette policy strongly discourages the presence of
mobile phones entirely with tactfully placed signs.
But how can this be reconciled with the need for a commercial industry of publishers, booksellers and others who will have much more to fear
from libraries when technology brings the local
library to every home and
mobile phone.
«The IR app has all of the features you would expect in a great e-reader,» explained president Amy Edelman in an announcement about the app, «including the ability to customize display settings, notes, highlights and bookmarks, and the ability to access all of your titles in a cloud - based
library for synched reading on as many platforms and devises (including the aforementioned Apple and Android), in addition to all your tablets, smart
phones and other
mobile devises
from a single account.
We saw that cell
phones were widely prevalent in developing countries so we created Worldreader reading apps which allow anyone, anywhere to access the Worldreader digital
library from a connected
mobile phone or tablet.
Google announced last week that it has made available to users of advanced
mobile phones an additional five hundred thousand titles
from its Book Search digital
library.
With cloud - based services you can access your
library from a lot of devices, like a computer, a tablet, an e-reader — and a
mobile phone.
The functionality of the app may differ
from one
mobile phone to another; the
library's website provides more information.
Compatible with nearly all popular
mobile phone platforms, the app is available
from the
library website, the iPhone App Store and Android Market (search for «multcolib» or «multnomah»), by QR code in the display signs at every neighborhood
library, and at multcolib.boopsie.com.